~CLARESHOLM REVIEW
VOLUME 10
GLARESHOLM ALTA., MAR. 5, 1914,
Claresholm and the Wind |
Main Exhibition Building, Grand |
Stand and Curling Rink, Completely |
Demolished, wiudows blown out of
houses, rink roof blown into residents
and tamily narrowly escaped with|
their lives. j :
Although Claresholm is not con-
sidered a town in the Wind Belt. |
«)\n Thureday evening, February 26th
a twisting wind from the South and
West, struck the town and before
three o'clock considerable damage
was done amounting in the neighbor-
hood of $3000. The Exhibition
buildings, the curliig rinks and the
house in which Mr: Jones lives were!
completely damaged. The roof "|
the rink blew against. the house and
smashed nearly every window and |
gave the wind a good start at the
house. The house was completely
damaged and dishes and furniture
were broken, A large beam falling}
ona bed where the Jittle girl was
sleeping and missing the girl by a}
few inches. In the exhibition build- |
ings, several storage articles were dis- |
troyed, a $186 show buggy was one}
and was owned by Mr. Hunter, Aj
large piece of wood was blown into}
Thos. Bernard’s parlor window, |
smashing the upper glass. Any |
buggies, waggons or carts that got a |
start at all were blown for bundreds
¥ yards and some end over end leav-
ie * latins |
-g the tops and boxes half way. |
The main part of the town suffered |
but little, just a few windows broken |
anda few signs on the main street)
were blown olf.
The
curlitg rink and-to the curlers,
rink was just about paid for buat tha! |
didnt matterit was the idea that)
there would be no more curling. |
Since the heavy blow many of the
to the
Tre}
greatest damage wis
curlers have been in mourning,
What We Head Now
Since the big wind storm on Thurs-
. ettae !
day last we have liad no Exhibition
a ; , |
buildings, no curling rink and no}
Since the}
thaw we have had no skating, even |
peace from the curlers,
there was skating it was an
open rink, = What we
the contral and
Alberta, is a large
ing and we want to get it) before any!
town. Also for the
people, we need a rink covered for
A building
when
necd now for!
southern part of
Exhibition build-
other town
the curlers and skaters.
like that could in the sum-
mer time fora horse show building.
Keep up the talk or there will be no
buildings.
be used
oo —___—
OF
G2»
Government of the
Province of
Alberta
NOTICE TO STEAM ENG-
INEERS
NOTICE TS HEREBY GIVEN
that examinations will be held at the
undermentioned places by Nat Mar-
shall. A daly appointed Taspector
of Steam Boilers for the Province of
Alberta,
Court House Buildings
Lethbridge, March 5th, 6th and
Tth, also Ist Satgrday in each month,
fee, Clarésholn, March Sth, Wilton)
Hotel. Sample room.
Stavely, March 19th, Stavely Hotel. |
Sample room,
At 9 o’clock a.m, for the purpose of,
giving Engineers and Apprentices an |
opportunity of qualifying for Certifi- |
eates under the provisions of The
Boilers Act,” 1912. |
Persons not already registered in
the Province who may desire appli-|
cation forms, can obtain same by ap
plying to the Department, or to the
above named Tuspector, and such ap
pheations forms must be properly
filled out, witnessed, and declared to
before a Commissioner or Justice of
the Peace before an examination can
be granted,
[ JOHN STOCKS
Deputy Minister. ;
Department of Public Works,
Hdmoitou, Alta,
) Edmund
lof the Post Office in the Town op) Peauures
| plan thereof filed in the Land Titles
‘bya barbed wire fence, aud there is
} } Pt Py & = >
and barn. The property,is situate 10)" Price $200.00, Apply J. ; Rk. |
miles from the Town of Claresholin, Watt 24, |
The sale is to be subject to a re On Feb. 28th the Dominion Bank}
Alberta Ranger in Mexico
Vancouver, Feb, 28.—The Sun is in
receipt’of a special letter from amem-
ber of General Villa’s staff in Mexico.
It throw an illuminating light on the
death of William Benton, the Scotch} many farmers around thie part. |
rancher who was killed in Villa’s Miss G. Lindsay of Medicine Hat
Camp recently and whose death has
caused diplomatic officials of three le'viaiting/at Air. and Mrs: Rey oouts,
Mr. Albert Stanly of Blairmore is
nations a great deal of worry. The
letter follows: “Judging from the| visiting town.
papers, all you Britishers and Can-} Mr, J. Reynolds has at-last broken
adians in Canada aud elsewhere are] into the poultry game. ;
up in arms over the killing of Scotch c
rancher William S. Benton, at Juarez| Mise G- Gardner of Macleod, is
Mexico. Herewith I give you General visiting with her sister Mrs. Shanks.
Villa's side of the story. A special} Mr. E.S. Scaman was out harrow-
messenger of General Villa’s told the) ing on Wednesday.
story, last night, ata meeting of the] pyon% forget. the Gold Medal con-
Constitutionalist Junta, of which T) 4o.¢ in the Methodist church Tuesday
am honorary member. Benton en-} ygarch 10th. |
tered Villa’s headquarters armed and
With boisterous language and oaths} ~Mrs. J. R. Watt will receive on |
he made demands with which Villa’ Friday and Saturday, 27th and 28th
refused to comply. of March.
“When the general leaped to his|
feet and ordered him out he yelled!
back, Vl stay until h—— freezes over
unless you pay me for the stolen cat-
tle’? Then Villa ordered bim thrown) Mr, Massey of High River pur-
out and the soldiers, being much ex- chased a fine But? Roek cock from
cited and fearing a second attempt on, R, BE, Moffatt. :
the geveral’s life, shot the Svotehman RORN To Mr and Mrs. Gilbert
) 4 ° = .
uae : C. Smith, a bouncing baby bey on
Vill have always been given, a square
; : Wedne
Mr. Featherstone has been in town
all week.
Messrs. Buckingham and Cotter’
are shipping back to their homesteads
ut Empress. Dl
Those who kuow geueral
stliv morning,
deal,e but like most Mexicans he is
\ tien \\ eG iin ie 1 ar ie
hot-headed, aud it wilh not do to ‘irs. W. OR, Shanks took a hurried
\ ‘ . ° “try \Mieheo aa tur
bully hina. Many Britisher aud rip t jelLeod on Monday, return
and Americans slight lim, because of | Ne, Uesdiay morning,
his Indiad blood, and he is quick to Mtn) Reineeke went to Calgary this
lresentandusalt. Mir. Benton's act! jorning to meet his wife who is re
in forcing his way into the geneml’s| qyijcne from the east.
private ottice Wis i mist ke which FOR SALN--White Wyandotte
cost him his life. Eve body regiets arate RanlysuRench Bissett, |
491
the incident, ly
“Respectiull, (signed) Gustive H.! ’
Schoof, squadiou sergeaut mdycr, ind got about $7.50 per ewt,
28rd Alberta Rangers.” ‘| Mr. andl Mrs, J.
Sergeant: Majov Schoof is a modern MN
eadow Creek, Phone R710.
Summing tre visit
JMaivhead of Wetuskiwin
‘ }
Cis Web wtiOyad . * +
Tre A ai Was in town renewing acquaintances |
soldier of fortune.
in Winnipeg, having lectured there on |
Pantson sold 25 hows this week |
this week.
one occasion. He also passed through YH.
the city about two years ago, whilecn ing in Calgary
s Wi eto Alberta trom Mexico, EN ii
his way home to Alberta I yn Mexieds yy WW. Moffatt M
in the over:
assisted this week.
where he bad
throw of the Diaz government, He
was through the South African war
Claresholm and District
|day and hurt his hip.
|with the approbation of the Muster of
li. A
P. was in Caigary | Granum, in the Provinee of Alberta
fat one o'clock
Mr. Layzell a horseman from Cale |p,
The Five Mile School
r , " On Saturday evening the U.F.A. |
On Friday Evening an illustrated | held a meeting in the school house |
lecture will be given in the School of! where a large crowd spent a very en- |
Publicity agent for the Canadian | was, given by three different com-
Pacific . Railway. An iuteresting mittees, consisting of two ladies,
talk is assured. three children and two gentlemen.
Mrs. Larkin has returned from the| After hearing the programme of each
City with a complete line of early| committee, it-was left to the vote of
Spring Millinery, and dress trimmings | the audience which committee had
and invites any ladies of Claresholm , succeeded in getting the best part. |
to call and inspect the same. Watch | The gentlemen received but very few
for announcement of opening dates| votes while the ladies and children
cominittees were a tie which will be |
tried out on March 14th at the next
meeting. :
The Programmes were as follows:
Gentlemen Committee:—a debate
“Resolved that country life is pre- |
ferable to city life.’ The speakers |
Mr. Clarkson, manager of the Can-| for affirmative, Mr. C. G. Gunderson |
adian Bank of Commerce here, fell] and Mr. T. P. Mosley
from his horse a week ago last Sun-| Messrs E. y
XK. M. Larkin is open for business
now, one door south of millinery store,
Every thing in notion line, big values
in granits and porcelain ware. Orders
taken for all late and popular music.
Come early and avoid the rush.
Negative,
and T. Brown, The |
He will have) judges decided in favor of the affir-
to spend afew days in Calgary hos-} mative new line Ladies committee.
pital. Musical
On Friday Evening the Agricul-| Smedstead.,
tural College gave alittle Hop from | Reading oy ——Mtres. Oliver Mosley.
selection;--Mr., John
eight thirty until twelve. The! Songs by Myrtle and Clarence
floor was dandy, a large crowd! Matson, An Acted Tableau by Roy
attended, the musie was fine anda) Lepard, Ina and J. Chilton, a reading
by Mr. L. W. Smith, a dialouge
(Arabella’s Poor Relations.) by Str,
and Mrs. Mosley, Nina
Lepard, a Song by Leg Smith anda}
Chil-
Resitutions by
Alice
Lebow, Ethel Lebow, Edun Berg and
Willifim Garis.
Songs by Alice Lydia, Mrhet Le
good time was had by all, Thanks
to the students and College,
FARM FOR SALE—A 160-acre
farm, four miles from Claresholm
and Roy
~ Reading by Myrtle Matson,
all in summer-fallow, for sale at $25 Minera hd
; sehr dren's Committe:
Phere baildings on
property worth $2,000.
wer cre are . .
| ; se Eimina Mosley, Ernest Mosley
Terms: :
Sn0 } } canth ;
S500 Cash, balance arranged,
Box 10s, Claresholm, Alta.
Apply
bow, Ernest Mosley, and Mrs, Le
Juleial Sale of Farm Proparty vr stor tk on Diet, tag
ishition” by the president Mr. T
| Brown,
PURSUAN'T to the Order Nisi and |
Everyone are cordially invited to
the final Order for Sale in The Can-|
attend a much better prepared pro-
hada Life Assurance Company vs Colin} gramme for this week,
Campoeit et al, there wili be sold Sunshine (lab. met
their
Mosieys last
The Aiberta
at the home of residents Murs,
Oliver Wednesdey af:
ternoon, Where a very enjoyable time
work
the Supreme Court of Alberta, by G,
Blair, Auctioneer, at his office
Was spent, and Lots of
lished. One
NEC tip ‘
in the afternoon, on
) Saturday, the 28th day of Maren, A. mitted.
WH4, the following Jands and! (yaneh was served at
hew member was ad
four o’elock,
With one of the British regiments, but ary was in town this week dickering |
has been a resid) nt of Alberta fora with Vanhorn for some horses, |
rot yveuts, ; aS < , r) |
PUP RE Seven Ford ears arrived in toWn on |
He loves the war game so much that,
j Section
premises, namely, the South-half of Phe after
had spent a
meeting broke up soon
5, ‘Township Ll, Range 25,
West of the dth Meridian, containing
everyone declaring they
very pleasant afternoon, and all look
Tuesday to Vanhorn’s barn, Six nralay, admeasurement S20 aeres, more ings forward to the next meeting to
as soon as trouble come in Mexico he Touring cars and one ruaabout, Get or less, together with the buildings beheld at the bome of Mrs. T. P.
took his own horse aud traveled south F ks
‘ your erders in early.
During the *
to the fighting zone.
rs Rs ee or aves ec et
past thiee years, he has been in 50 TONS —Praivie Hay for sale
five dollars per ton, inquire of BLS,
Mr. Young of
Mexico more or jess ull the time. ;
Canion
1-2-83-4
Baker on
Ranch.
————E—
Auction Sale
PURSUANT to the order
Court made in a certain action in the pe good,
Supreme Court of Alberta, Judicial
District of Macleod in which Byron
Walker and others are
faintiffs and Levi Orrin Hart and ; ees eatery
Bee AeetARPenanhtaraha Neth BUee byterian Church on Mareh 13.
quaiter of Section Twenty eight (28), Mr. G, Adams, Manager of J,
in Township Eleven (11), Range) Clark and Co's, store here has been
Twenty-eight (28), West of the Fourth very ill and been in bed for the past
week,
Wednesday night was the biggest
night at the picture showy, Keep on
Don’t forget to hear H Treby Heale
Distinguished Tenor — singer and
Dramatic Tmpersonator in the Pres-
in the Province of Alberta,
His Majesty, His} A Jarge number of visitors are in
Successors aud Assigns all mines and | town this week attending the Weed
minerals and the right to work the Convention which is held at the
same, Will be offered for sale by pub-| College. ;
lic auetion ou Saturday, the 28th day iia Ria ren tranieonaeniil
. e ex Of ya) ow
of Mareh, A. D. 1914, at the hour of , . ERG EGS
; , : and Mr. Whail’s
11 o'clock in the forenoon at in front :
ix the very best.
| place crowded,
ion contains 160 acres more or less, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. McKinnon and
excepting thereout Two and one little boy of Meadow Creek, wha
hundredth (2-1/100) acres more or| have been visiting
less for a Roadway, as shown on a}Toronto and Eastern
turned on Monday last.
Meridian
reserving unto
full
choice of
Keep the
swing
Claresholm, The said quarter sect-
Canada, re-
Office for the South Alberta Land! 4, Hinkle had a runaway
Registration District as 1271. Q. The} pajtingers team of drivers. The
land herein comprised containing Oue| buggy was smashed, Mr. Hinkles
hundred and fifty-seven and ninety-| little finger broken and his lady
nine hundredths (157-997 100) acres | friend hurt slightly.
more or less.
ef RY SA LE—Ches 22 :
The quarter section is surrounded FOR 54LE—Che i lot 3 » block
2, Claresholm, cottveniently situated,
also on the property a armall bouse | second ave, north, with a shack there-
of the coming as pictures are guarante ed to |
relatives in|
with N.| & Company, Solicitors for the Plain-
and erections thereon, subject tothe Mosley's.
reservations and conditions contained :
in dhe from the
the existing Certificate of Title.
THE VENDOR is informed
there is on the premises
grant Crown or in
t
The members of the Park Associ
Avricultueal Society held
a joint meeting in the Council Chaim
Right at
that
one house
24x24, one und one-half storey high,
10x12,
repair,
stable 80x60, and hen-house ation and
wood state of
all frame, in ag
jad that there is three and one halt
‘niles of fencing (two wires,) around
the land, and that the soil is a sandy
‘Joum with clay subsoil. The prop-
erty is ina first class location,
‘on main road, five
_Granum,
1 THE PROPERTY will be subject
to a reserved bid which has been
‘fixed by the Master, The purchaser
is, at the time of sale, to pay down of
hers to discuss what shonld be done
with the ruins of the wind-storms at
the fair grounds. Nothing definite
was arranged only that) the ruins sh-
being
Kast of
ould be cleaned up, This was done on
Tuesday. What will eventually tke
place regarding the building of new!
buildings and a combined rink sid
horse show building has not yet been
decided.
Gold “Medal Contest
Gold Medal Contest will be held
under the auspices of the WLCVPLU,
on Tuesday evening Mareh 10th in
the Methodist Church, As intimated
lust week this contest will take the
form of a recital from Ralph Conner’s
“Black Rock’. The musical nam
bers will be furnished by some of
Claresholm best talent, A> splendid
evening's entertainment is assured,
~ Notice
miles
ten per cent of the purchase price to
the Vendor or his Solicitors, and the
}remainder of the purchase money is
to be paid into Court to. the credit of
| this action within 60 days thereafter:
without interest,
| IN ALL RESPECTS the terms
land conditions of sale will be the
jstunding conditions as approved by
| the Master ora Judge of this Hon-
ourable Court. Further particulars
can be had from the Auctioneer, or
from Lougheed, Bennett, MeLaws
tif, Calgary, Alberta,
DATED at Calgary, Alberta, this
Isth day of February, A. D, 1914. “The following farm implements
(SGD) LAURENCE J, CLARKE, were removed from the Sovtth
Clerk of the Supreme Cow. East Quarter — of Section — 6,
APPROVED
WA a iaby
West of the
Claresholia
, Township 14, Range 27.
Pourth Meridian, near
recently and any person found stor-
. NOTICE ne or retaining these implements
after this notice will be legilly
——— prosecuted if the implements are
and all
A meeting of the Farmers
serve bid fixed by the Court or ajof this town closed, and all accounts
Judge thereof. ‘Terms of sale to be} were trausfered to the *Dominion
10 per cent cash and the balance} Bank, High River, The Manager
within 60 days without interest. For] Mr. Dawson, ts still in town
further particulars apply to R. Thurston and
H. O. HASLAM, Jmoved to Calgary.
Claresholm, Alberta, Monday eveniug train,
They left on
2-4.
but Mr.. (8th 1914 in the Parish Hall at 2.30
Mr, P. Grey, were | p.m.
not returned to the said farm on or
before March Oth.
One MeCornniek Binder; One Cock-
shut plough; One John Deere Plough;
One MeCormich Mower
Cream-
March
interested in the Claresholm
ery, Will be held on Friday
Carl J. Braren, |
See. Treas.
Commernieate with Box S64 Leth-
bridge, Alberta
)
| ture, in connection with
5, ‘The
0. Any cow
Big Competition Open to all
Honorable Duncan Marshall, Mini-
ster of Agricultural, has arranged for
four dairy competitions to be carried
Gophers were seen last week by | Agriculture by Mr. Norman Rankin.| joyable evening. The programme/on in the province, beginning April
Ist. These competitions will be un
der the direct charge and supervision
of Mr. S. G. Carlyle, who is instru-
ctor in the management of dairy
herds, under the Dominion grant,
the Provincial Department of Agri-
culture. Three of these competitions
will be carried on in connection with
the three Schools of Agriculture,
with headquarters at Vermillion, Olds
and Claresholm These competitions
shall be open to grade cows only, and
the prizes in connection with them
will be live stock, As there are ten
prizes to be given in each competit-
ion, there should be a large number
of entries, and a good deal of interest
should be taken in it. Mr. Marshall
has decided to put on these compet-
itions because of the success that vt-
|tended the competition beld, under
the Dominion grant in aid of agricul
the demon-
stration farm at Vermillion last) year,
As a number of girls, who have been
attending the School of Agriculture,
have signified their desire to take
part in the competition, there isa
special award “being offered to the
highest in con-
Mr.
assisted in this work
vir! who stands the
nection with eaeh competition.
Carivk
by the instractors in animal husban.
will be
dry and some of che other teachers in
ih Sehools af Agriculture, If
dairying is to be a success in Alberta,
there is nothing so important to the
the
cows, aun the oaly
dairyman as securing of first-
class Way he can
find out whether his cows are protit-
able or no, is to subject them to the
test of the seales and the Babeock
test. ;
Che fourth competition will bea
contpetition open to pure bred herds
province of
is expected thata
throughout
Alberta and it
nomber of the
the entie
will enter in
will not
only show keen rivalry in competing
thei dillerent
herds, but itis expeeted that
breeders
this competition, that they
for the prizes with
SOULE
made
phenomenal reeords will be
which would help to advertise Al
borta as a dairy province.
the
Phe regulations roverning
competitions areas tollows
OPEN TO GRADE COWS ONLY;
I. Whe
open to any students who has attend
competition shall he
ed the Vermilion, Olds or Chiresholin
Avricultie, and to any
farmer within a radius of 20 miles of
Schools of
one of these schools,
2. ‘The chompetition shall commence
the Ist of April, [it and fresh cows
will be admitted until the Ist of
June. id,
3% ‘The competition shall close the
Sist of January, 1h
1.) Bach competitor may enter as
many cows as he or she desires, only
grade cows being eligible,
test for
from the
shall be
she fresheus,
enehl Cow
started day
and shall continue from a period of
240 days,
freshening previous to
April ist, may be started in the com-
beginning April Ist,
petitiop
will be
Departinent f
indlk sheets
the
md
supplied by
7. Seales
Agriculture,
4, An inspector will be appointed ta
the their
ilk at least once in six weeks, or as
inspect cows, und weigh
olten as he deems advisable,
9, All milk must be
sent in promptly to the inspector by
registered mail at the end of each
calender mouth,
record sheets
110. When a new cow freshens, the
inspector must be immediately noti-
fied in writing.
Il. The must be furn-
ished at the time of entry with the
age and description of each cow,
12, At visit, of the juspeetor
the competitor shall furnish a state-
ment olf the amount and kind of feed
to each animal,
inspector
each
13. dn cases of dispute, the inspect-
or’s rufing shall be final,
l4. Any competitor with the rules
return the scales to the inspector
15, Every
competitor complying
with the foregoing rales in the cons
(eoutiaued on page eight)
we have met before. H> gave his
haine; tho other man cpologized and
walkod away. But Saluzo noticed
that e turned more than once and
[Hooke back.
| As soon as they were alone, Heth-
, erington turncd eagerly to the detect-
ive and beggei him to continue his
| story. The American obeyed but did
not tell Hetherington what he had
done, only what he had discovered.
I don't pretend ‘v’s of any import:
ance, but I have foun’ the end of the
thread which you wished me to do—
it shouldn't ke dificult to follow it up.
| It’s of the utmost importance, Heth-
Continued) erington said quickly. Ther he hesi-
te fay Gta 2 duit ahi aeiaad | tated and Saluzo saw his face grow a
Waites ald é : anes u Ate | Fao paler, I ought to havetold you
rere said, pe We snall meet) that in London I have been passing
Boas GaAAa TE CORBI Reedy ata aa renrriy inten aae embarrassed
I apsta love shel romance, ‘ ‘Baltae pretended to take no notice;
armen made a zrimace, No ue 1
romance it London, and leas) tas south ae ae ue epee the SS mesite | :
AneMen: | Suppose I am on the wronz track? he
I'm sure wherever you go, you take| FBIRERSANEE CULE relat ore Neon
{t with ye. Bowing low, ‘he kingad | Potent ioe ea voricy NaN bel Pt
her hand, toa on. tues mornisy-vor tte "bth, and
aluz rove + e ‘ UEL ; :
ite aaited at Wudisvinnton wat, finding eA sila Aaa fp faite Hoare
he was not in, he took a seat in the
entrance hail where he could see
every one who arrived. He had had 1
a long tiring day and with dimiculty| ducing his cigarette to a pulp. Go
on with your inquiries, Mr. Saluzo, but
had kept awake. It was not until a 4
quarter to one that Hetherington made! Gon't question me, he said at last. |
have asked yc° to probe into the past
his appearance. Saluzo led him to a! f ?
quiet corner fn the now almost de-|—! have given you a free hand, rely-
serted lounge; ordered him a whisky! !28 on your discvetion, faithfully be-
,.| lieving that you will freat al! you dis-
and soda ane a cup of coffee for him-|
self—he wanted to keep wide awake} Cover with the utmost coafidence. But
Continue
LOVE CONQUERS ALL
THINGS
(BY ARTHUR APPLIN)
Ward, Lock & Co., Limited, Lon-||] :
don, Melbourne and Toronto
man?
Again silence. Hethering.or was
for «n hour or two yet. Hetherington it is no use probing me.
Was not commuricative. He stili| for a little while «: any tate on the
seemed depressed, he till carried| ine you have taken up, confining your-
self, remember, strictly to the past.
Be careful how you make inquiries and
otf whom. You agreed to be paid by
And! Tesults—and the whole success of the
| result lies in privacy. J can only say,
Be astchished at}
about with him an atmosphere of lone-
ly dejecticn,
Well? Saluze sai? at last.
Well? Hetherington repeated.
then he started as if suddsnly remem: |
—so far so good.
and that you will tel! me more | under the name of Oscar Soral. Again,
jabling him to g- a distance of thirty-
Bordleigh Junctio1, and not the other;
THE REVIEW, CLARESHOLM, ALTA.
!
Derwin on Marrlago
A newspaper correspondent <ecalls
the following early advocacy of eug:
enic marriages from Darwin's ‘De-
scent of Man.’
‘Man scans with scrupulous care
the character and pedigrte of his cat-
tle and dogs before he matches them;
but when he comes to his own mar-
riage he rarely or never takes any
such care. He is impelled by nearly
the same motives as the lower animals
when they are left to their own free
choice, though he is in so far superior
to them that he highly values menta!
charms and virtues, On the other
band he is strongly attracta by mere
wealth and rank. Yet he might by
selection do something not only for
bodily constitution and frame of his
offspring, but for their intellectua' and
moral qualities. Both sexes ought to
umforl
Overshoes
Rubbers and
Over-Steckings In One.
nd on and take off. Fit
= ‘Weer Well, Al! sises
women and children.
All Dealers
The Strength of Tiny Creatures
| When compared with tho strength
‘of man, the strength of dn insect is
| Wonderful, the iittle ant can carry!
; ; any marked degree i I
|@ Ipad forty or fifty times as heavy as | salad but audh Honea APA UlBblnne ind
| prepa eau OE cadceiine can | will nevér be even partially realized
ropel a bvrden a hundred times , ’
own weight. The insignificant house | oneniy boone CEL ht Ls
fly gives a hundred strokes of his J ‘i
wings in about {wo seconds, thus en-|S°"Vice who aids foward this end.’
Scientific Mar-,ement Again
Our boss is a crank on efficiency.
Waat’s he up to now?
Trying to teach the stenographer
to chew her gum in two movements
less per minute to the lower jaw.
five feet in tha: time.
Perhaps the :aost wonderful of all|
insects is the dragon fly. It goes}
through the air at the rate of sixty
miles an hour and can stop instantly,
or change its course backward or side-
ways without lessening its speed or|
changing -he position of its body.
One little honey-bee will hang sus: | Teacher—Now, boys, here’s a little
Paaern earn Cane en ah his | example in mental arithmetic. How
ai >¢ H y ] [rb , y f
one liolding to another, chain fashion; | oe Peter een peat ron ante
and one cannot see that the first bee! Pupil—Please teacher, was it a man|
wavers or finds his load heavy. Nas a woman?
It All Depends
A Fa'nt Hearted Poet
Samuel Rogers, the English poet,
whose house in London ~vas noted as
a literary center, was very fond of
the society of ladies and was a great
| Beware of Vintments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury,
as-mercury will eurcly destroy the sense of cmeli
and completely derange the whole system whep
entering if through the mucous surfaces. Such
artictes ehonld never be used eerie on prescrip
bering. Have you commenced to dig!
out my past? —into the past of the} nothing you discover. favorite with them. = Yet he never (iss rom reputable puysicians, us the damage they
: e@ past a} viva f ' >, | married and in his letter years he used | Will do ts ten fold to the good you can possibly dee
man we called Hetherington number| With that he left him and Saluzoj; + (five from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured |
one—yet? saw him take the lift up to. is room.| {2 Testet not having done so. Rogers’ | by F. J. cheney & Co. Toledo, O., containe no mere
Ma! oat : “ “| nearest ¢ x »t.a.| cury, and ts taken internally, acting directly wu
‘e waited in the hall until he was! st approximation to the nupt.a the blood and mucous surfaces of the «ystein. nD
buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the
Just got beneath the surface, that
Is all, Saluzo answered cheerfully.
Really nothing -vorth telling—still if
you want to know, ed in. .
A quick shange came ove: Hether- For the next few days he lived the
Ington, his eyes brightened. 1: became) life of a well-to-do man in a wealthy,
Interested and alert. 1 tell you I want) city: it seemed as if ke had no object}
the smallest ‘etail, everything you|in life but to kill time. He rode or
can discover that happened before the| ‘valked to the perk in morning,
hour of “ialf-past five on September 5, lunched and ‘dined at all known
Right, Saluzo said.
mind, Sir George, first of all telling! ionally yawned an hour or two away in
me where you were at half-past nine} some of the so-called places of amuse-
a.m,, half-past two p.m., an’ half-past, ment. ut he assiduously cultivated
five p.m., on September 5. stray acquaintances, and not a day
Hetherington bowed his head and passed but that he knew exactly how
commenced io fumble in ‘ig case for! his client, Sit George Hetherington
a cigarette. | had spent it.
Shortly after half-pact flve I was! He, too, was killing time but with
driving from sordliegh Junction to my
country house at Cranby. I thought} fence.
you understood, Mr Saluz-, that it's} time. a man who found life a burden,
you who've got to tel! me everything! at moments almost insupportable. Not
that happened before half-past five. so his wife.
Everything that's happonei to you?
Surely—
Everythir » that’s happened
man calling himveli Sir George Heth-
erington. TI dor.’t vome into the arg-
ument as far as you e concerned.
| quite sure that Hetherington had rea
the
the
and in the more fashionable restaur-
to aj ants—-always beautiful, always well
dressed; very seldom with ‘er hus:
band. Once or twice Saluzo_ left
flowers for her at tle flac, = little at-
Saluzo shrugged his shoulders a lit-| tention which would have meant no-
tle impatientiy. thing in her own co itry,
Then one Jay( choosing his time
Very well— He stopped short. as
standing a little way off, he saw a!carefully ,he made an afternoon call.
man staring fixedly at Sir George; The porter who took him up in the
Fetherington and the expression on, lift recognized him. You were mak-
his face was that of a maa who had! ing inquiries the other day if ‘.ere
just found some one he had lost and| were any flats to let. 1 believe Mrs.
been long anc. vainly searching for. Soral is trying to get rid of her lease,
{ sir,
CHAPTER XVII
Presently the man who stared,
crossed the lounge and stood in front)
of Hetherington. He too.. no notice
whatsoever of Saluzo.
I can’t have made a. mistake—you |
are George——? , ‘ ‘ | was a little before his time. When
The detective caw Hetherington} he was admitted, ho asked if he might
start at the sound of his ov 1 Christ-| !0ok around the flat, as he hoped (o
fan name. Or was it he vrendered at| take up the lease of it. Without the;
the sound of this man’s voice? But| least hesitation, the servant showel|
he didn't an:wer; he waited for the! lim the various rooms. Luxury the;
stranger to complete his name key note; no expense had been spared;
George "art? Sively [ }everywhere good tuste was exhibited.
made a mistake? Always, however, the tast of a wo-
A shadow of disappointment crossed, M4n; there was nothing to suggset the}
Hetherington’s fuc2, Tar? afratd you! Presence ol a nan,
have—and yet I have a feeling that As soon as the _ Servant left him!
}alone in the drawitg-rocm, Saluzo lit
| a cigarette. Carmen always smoked
so she could not object to tobacco, He}
7ZEMAS examined the ,ictures casually, the)
few photographs very carefully, There |
Y
ff
fy
a lool: at her flat, Saluzo replied.
the door and informed him that Mrs.
Sorai was out, that he had been askei
haven't
wag not one of her husband anywhere. |
Then he walked to the door, opened it}
noiselessly and listened. It was;
a large flat and the servants’ quarters |
Were some distance awa). Leaving!
the front door ajar, he crossed the
room and sat down in front of the bu-|
reau as if ho were going to
write a_ letter. But instead of
taking one of the delicatel, scented |
sheets of notepaper he carefully ab-|
stracted two sheets of blotting p:per; |
folding them up he slipped them into
the breast pocket of his coat. Then
he deftiy opened a drawer; as it was|
unlocked, he gave uo more than a cur:
sory glance insid». The third drawer
was ! cked, Without the least hesi-!
tation Saluzo took a smal bunch of
skeleton keys from his pocket; with
CE:
|
We
ty
} remarkable celerity the loc! slipped |
back, and the dra‘ver opened, Like!
lightning his hands pounced ‘pon a
: small bundle of photographs which!
had been slipped inside a blue silk
case; a couple of women, au elderly
black-bearded man; a group, and lust
of all, a photograph of » young man
wearing a soft olt hat and dre
| in boots and breeches. It was signe
| ‘Your’s ever.’ Saluzo hesitated a mo-
{ment with this in his hand, The man
such as
had a neatly cropped beard
is worn in the navy, but he looked
like,yan Englishman. The hat partly
concealed hts eyes; it might have b>.n
Soral, or Hetheringtor, or any on,
Without the beard?
Saluzo shook his head and put
The itching, burning, suffering and
loss of sleep caused by eczemas,
rashes and irritations of the skin
and scalp are at once relieved and
permanent skin health restored in
most cases by warm baths with
Cuticura Soap followed by gentle
ate
Ae
not wor, steal.ng, He elos't the
drawer. Then a little door in ihe con
tre of the bureau amoag the pigeon
applications of Cuticura Ointment. Doles pouanl Rls ores A Tepes
Cutloura Soap and Ointment are sold througn ‘e > t seepiix let
the world. A Ilberal sample of each, with atpege renin the temptation of keepiiy le
booklet on the care and treatment of the ekin and
wealp, sent post-free. Address Potter Drug & Chem,
Corp., Dept. 12K, Boston, U. 3. A. (To be Continued.)
A tearpoonful of gossip will taint a
kettleful of ure truth
|
ale | tie was with a girl whom he thought
livevatived to rest, then he, too turn:| t? be the most beautiful he had aver;
Here a large party that had just en-/
tered, in the center of which was a!
i y , { Ww $ H j occus: | ‘ ; |
But would you, and unknown restaurants, and lady leaning on the arm of her hus-
‘the air of a man who killed in self de-| worth millic
A man who was frightened of | reached 50.
Saluzo frequently saw;
j her at theatres, met her in the park}
| 1 know, I have jus¢ come up to tiave}
He told the servant who answered!
;} dollars is a tragedy.
to call and she exected him, but he}
) ben made for a public telephone ser-
| large pockets in your apron when go-
‘article can be slipped Into the pocket
all the photographs; even the last was)
At the end of the Lo:don sea-; The. por bottle,
secn, Euld by Druge -ts.
}8on she saia to him at a ball, I go; Tsk Hall's Paw’ *aratina oa,
|; tomorrow to Worthing. He did not; i
; Stili |. Use
go with her. Some months afterward
| being at Ranelagh, he saw that the at-| Ho + about that garden hose I loaned
tention of every one vas drawn to-| you last summer?
I still have it, old man.
Can't I get it back?
Yes, Lui not now, I had it all colled
up and a turkey built a nest and went
band. Stepping forwarc to see this! <
wonderful beauty, Fe found it was Lis| to setting im it.
love She merely said: You never
As a verm'-'de there is no prepara-
tion that cquals Mother Graves’ Worm
Live: Sold for Money ; Exterminator. It has seved the lives
W.thin the last year a score of men) of countless chilcren.
ns have died before they |
The mos! recent instance |
lis that of a Cnicag man wo left $30,-}
1 000,000 at the age of 47.
It is not always gafe to t:ust re-
ports, but in this case they seem to
lagree that thé 3train of overwork
broke him owe. He inherited a
large busines» and he feit obliged to
carry its burden.
| In modern business theve is one) anything now, The curate was all
| gFeat fact which men are sjowly find-/sympathy, and in the endeavor to clieer
ing out. | her by pointing out what a comfort to
No man can do it all. | her her daughters must bo, replied: !
By proper system and organization; ¢sn quite und-rstand th:’, but you are
he can multiply himself many timesj solaced in— pos
and still save himsel.. No matter} Sir, interrupted tio indignant lady.
how big a man may be, ue is a failure} Allow m. to infor. you that I am not |
lit he thinks he must be always on, laced in at all.
hand te run his shop. The test of ef- —_—
ficiercy is the running of the machine
‘while the boss is out playing golf or
|}came ‘o Wort’ ing.
His Mistake
She vas a plump widow, with two
charming daughters. She had been
a ‘relict’ just a year, and was begirn-
ing to wesr her ‘weeds’ lightly. All
ithe same, when the new curate called
upou her she sighed: Ah, I feel the
loss of my poor, dear husband very
} much,
/ courting the fresh air for his health
and for a workingman's appetite.
Grinding one’s life out before 50 for
Eve» though the
profits be measured in millions, it 's
not worth it.
TAKE NOTICE
straight testi-
We pibl si simple,
interviews,
monials, not press agents
from well-known people.
From all over America. tiey testify
to the merits of MINARD'S LINI-
MENT, the bes. of Household Remed-
ies
|
‘Velephcnes in Jerusalem |
A Bell telephone system has suse}
been installed in Jerusalem by the| yNARD'S LINIMENT CO., Limite!
Ottoman government for its own use.
| There are ten stations connecting the
government house with the courthouse
and military headquarters and sever-|
al police stations. Application has 4 Moth Visjeller |
is a sure preventive
By cropping a trifle
in drawers, t’unks a+ cupboards it
| will ender the garments saf: from}
| injury. iv will iulso Keep ants from
; Tu-penttr
vies in Jerusalem, Jaffa and Bethle- acalnat moths.
em,
Welding Ccpper
A process of welding copper with| closets and storevo>ms if 1 few drops
the oxyacetylene flame has been devel-| are Iu in the corners and upon the
oped by a German inveator. He has; shelves. It is sure destruction to all
found it necessary .o use larger torch: | sorts of vermin and will drive them
es than for iron welding, but in gen-| away from the various articles of furn-
eral the process fs *i.ailar, except that! iture, It does not injure either furn-
he employs a liqnid weldin., past? and/iture or cluthing, One tablespoonful
asp al copper welding wire. The added to a bucket of warm water [8
paste prevents the formatior. of oxide, ¢xeellent for. cleaning painted wood-
The process has been used for welding | Vork.
copper plates up to an ineh in thick-}
The process as *eing used in
Poipons with Beads
nese
the principal copper works in Ger} Pretty pompo-+ for slippers are
many with great success 'made in this way: Gather a double
|} Strip of chiffon—about three inches
A Danie! Come to Judgment | wide ov an inch ane a half wide when
But, judge, protested Dingley. T da! folded—into a roseite, Make a little
not BEonowedot can fine ine $80 on| Satin rose of he same color.
Paattt SEY 4 my | If you are not versed in the ways of
the testimony... cble constable: says ul making roses from satin make two
was exceedit g& the speed limit, and Li rogetton as you made the chiffon one,
say T wasn't. He Lasn’t brought 49Y| one smaller than iho other, and fasten
a 38 setantiate al : ;
bt Subs tantiate his claim. them togetuer and they will look
They’s suthin’ in that, said the flowerlike
; Leck ver , Py ee nbs
judge, and T reckon we'll hev to com} req pright crystal beads for the|
promise, Yo pay the $50 now, and t
some time, when you're passin’ this
Way ufall
fer all
equare,
, wer center and dot heads around the |
edges of the petals of the satin rose. |
tlver beads rays
effect, but geld or si
| slso be pretty.
The smallest conscript in France is!
probably Eugene Espagnol, of Louins | roniian
near Tow He stands 3ft 7in, in b ae ds aOR HAP einen
stockings, and turns the scales at 42//:8 18 good for | aes
nainde or just three stone. lungs with i.vigorating oxygen,
|
Whistling for Healt» |
discovered that whist-
It fills the
and
by muscles. Bcys sre prone to be
| broader c) ested than 9’ ‘Is and better |
‘ } : } f de uscular tones
ing about putting the house in order. | constructed for decp m
| Pieces of .tring or cny out-of-the-place |
it is sensible and conve.tert to have
and put away at leisure, | hav> passed babyho 4 is to "vhistle.
The teacher, who was giving the
Try Murine Eye Remedy | primary class a nature talk, inquired:
Johnnie, how does a bee sting?
\JE you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes |
‘or Granulated Eyelids. Doesu’t Smart Johnnie, a.graduate from the school
| —Soothes Eye Pain, Druggists Sell | of experience, replied with emphasis:
| Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c,} Awiul!
| Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes,
!25c, S0c, Eye Books Free by Mail,{ Cut squares of wit..e cileloth and
| AN Eye Yenle Good fer All Eyes that Need Cave | put under th children’ plates and
Murine Eye Remedy Co. Chicago | cave the tablecl
because of the lung exercise which ac- |
companies whirling and one of the,
first things they try to do when they |
refrain from marriage if they are in}
Every one does g000| ——_—_—————
| ued:
! about two pounds of cz.ndy every week. |
I never have any cppetite for] Wombat?
lies in the use cf more yolks than
| soning of cheese.
| the feet.
jter for a few minutes, an! the skin
this revivifies flagging spirits and tab-}
|
|
ARROW and:
NITRO CLUE
i.
f 7
RAY REMINGTON ,
‘as UMC
1OFSHE:
iby
(a
weds 4
tks
CANADIAN made from our new
factory at Windsor, Ontario,
Try Remington-UMC Arrow and Nitro
Clubs this season. Their absolute reliability
has made them the choice of sportsmen all ove
Canada, The highest tt) ammunition sol*
in the Dominion. We have yet to find the keen
sportsman who balks at paying the price,
Certain details of manufact i igi
Remington-UMC* shotthell, May we and eu Sioeiter ees
* ‘ :
ress ona postcard will bring ibe renee eae cine
Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co., Windsor Ostieio
* U .
Ish
S HOME BRIGHTE
AND LABOR LIGHTER
A Paste |rneF FR Dattey@mf No Dust :
No.Waste | Hamitron, canaoal No Rust
Hocds of the Colleges Ebony Backed 3rushes
If you have taken a degree in di- When you elean the etony brushes
vinity at Oxford, you are entitled to] on your toilet table rub petroleum jel-
Wear a red hood ly over the backs befo-e you wash the
The speaker was Ethelbert Reed,! bristles, as this prevents the soda or
the Duluth psychologist. He contin-| ammonia in the water from injuring
‘the ebony. The jelly should after-
ward be removed by polishing the
back with a dry cloth. r
Entertainment for All
A pretty girl can get a lot of
entertainment out of her mirror, ob-
served an exchange,
SS eerenneeneaenesneeen oo
Wearing a red hood myself, I take
a aatural intcrest in hood stories.
There is one atout a man who com-
plained to his bishop that So-and-So,
though nor of Oxferd, was wearing a
master’s hood.
And I call it, bishop, sald the com-,
Plainant bitterly, wear’ lie on his .
Baaie M 2B e | True! So can a Jain girl who
Oh, don't use so strong « word as/ thinks she js pretty,
that, sald the bishcp. Just call it a}
false hood. ie No Deception
Wife—You dezaived me. When you
| married me
He's aj the road.
| Hub—Well, so I have; only it's a
: long tire in arriving.
—EEEE es
A Freethinker
Willie—Paw, what is a freeth!nker?
Paw—An unmarried man my son,
Maw—You go to bed, Willle.
qesasecemen aeons
The Beauty of a C'ea Skin.—The
; condition of the liver regulates the
A Significant Name [condition of the blcod. A disordered
és x | y F es in the bloo
What aro you thinking about, Missi jn4 these show themselves in blemish-
;es Gn the skin. Pirnclee’s Vegeta:
j ble Pills in actinZnpo.: the liver act
upon the blood ang a clear, healthy
skin will follow intelligent use of this
| Standard medicine. Ladies, who will
; fully appreciate this prime quality >Z
| these pills, can use “hem with the cer-
A Numter of Hcirlooms | tainty that the effect will be mot
General Futman once slept in that! gratifying. :
bed, volunteered the landlord.
Um
And sat .1 that very chair you are
A Poser you said you had a job on
Mentor—Consider the owl.
bird of wisdom, and he gets his re-
putation by keeping silent. .
Stentor—How about the screech owl.
Easy Mark
Madge—. hear he’s very sweet on;
you.
Marjorie—Rath r He's good for |
Of your name, Mr. Huggins.
My name? :
Yes, as Shakespeare says, fs there|
anything in a name?
He showed her there was.
Ccourtier and Poet
Louls XV, having shown Boileau
now sitting in. % ‘ “
some verses 0. his own composition
And refused to e:t this ham sand- fears iq
wich, I suppose, interrupted the tours) qemanded his candid opition about
EY Well, 1 con't think IT want 44 Sire, answered the poet, your majese
e $ ity wished to write poor lines and you
Gende } did i! so wel, ‘Lat you pr ved that
Rat faanters ao asniaining| n.thing is ‘mpossible to your majes
é b a it ‘
gender to u p-ad. of young children | M
as visitors entered. They- begged |
to continue, as they would be delight- shanges
ed to hear the children's replies. You will admit a wits mon some
Children, she asked, what is girl,| times changes his mind.
woman, man: ! Yes, repliec Senator Sorghum. He
One little han was so eager, she} also changer his wardrcb». But in
appealed to the owner proudly. }doing so he avoids popular attention
Well, Artie? ;as much ‘¢ postible.
Can any little boy, uske: the new
teacher, tell me the difference’ between
la lake and an 92:an?
ac-} I can, replied Edward, whose wis-
;}dom had bee: learicd from exper:
for the erotant jence. Lakes irr Liuch pleasanter to
! swallow whe» you 19) in.
t _
Though the door of a vault
Girls is females. woman's a male
Artie rose to the occasion. j
Hi |
and man's a human bear. |
Jones—Has Brown % runring
count at the store?
Smith-—I think not,
says it is stil star ding.
In still air a pigeon can fly 1200! in a
jyards a mintie, with a br-ezs, 1500! New York bank weighs 40 tons it is so
with a strong wind 2,060} carefully balanced that it can be open-
yards and
ed and closed with a man's finger.
yards,
Mors Yet’
Why the divorcee? Couldn't he sup
port her in the style to which she was
accustomed?
Yes! but she wanted something bet.
ter than thar.
Merely Prudsnce
Hub—Hew could you go and order
that expensive necitlace? Don't you
know how I'm fixed?
Wife—Yes, but 1 don't want people
to Know how you arc fixed.
The kind cf Christianity that only
visits where they set out good dinnece
and lets a poor neighbor suffer and
die alone, is not the real thing, and
it is of very little uso here or here
after.
The secret of the delicious omelet
whites, a little rich cream and a sea-
When dressing poultry do not waste |
Place th>m in boiling wa-
A delicious sweet sandwich is made
and nails will come off easily. They} of thin slices of white ‘bread spread
make a delicious bit of soup or Jelly,| with jam topped with cream cheese.
Along with dyepepata comes nervousness, sleeplessness and gen-
eral ill health, hy? Because a disordered stomach does not permit
the food to be assimilated and carried to the blood. On the other hand,
the bloed is charged with poisons which come from this disordered
digestion, In turn, the nerves are not fed on good, red blood and we
see those symptoms of nervous breakdown. It is not head work that
does it, but poor stomach work. With poor thin blood the body is not
protected inst the attack of germs of grip—bronchitis—consump-
tion, Fortify the body now with
Golden Medical Discovery
an alterative extract from native medicinal plants, prescribed in both liquid
and tablet form by Dr. R. V. Pierce, over 40 yeara ago,
ore its superior worth as an in-
. It invigorates and regulates
table’ ,
ne far ries bec te De. Fleres's ’
The Common Sense Medical Adviser.
ok gE eg nT eee Meg A a RO nig
a
———
¥e
ey;
Most people would be
benefited by the occa-
sional use of
Na-Dru-Co Laxatives
Gently, thoroughly, and
without discomfort, they free
the system of the waste
which poisons the blood and
lowers the vitality, 5c. a
box, at your Druggist’s,
National Drug and Chemical
of Canada, Limited,
Dress Material for Curtains
‘Thin dainty dress materials often
make delightful curtains, Dainty
flowered cotton crepes, for instance,
make charming bedroom curtains.
They are cheap, too, and that is al-
ways a virtue. Some of them cost
twenty-five cents a yard, some even
less. Then there are the plain and
crinkled crepes in tle loveliest artis-
tic tones, some of them of mercerized
cotton, so that they look and hang ex-
actly like soft, sheer silk. In this
there are exquisite shades of the new
apricot, mulberry, peachbloom, yellow
and wisteria, The marquisettes, so
frequently seen on the bargain coun-
ters in odd lengths, are quite beauti-
ful enough for parlor or living-room, es-
pecially when they se:ve as a bit of
transparent color between white net
glass-curtains and those of a heavy
material and dark color inside. The
muslins and organdies are full of
dainty possibilities and even the or-
dinary ginghams, when carefully se-
lected are not t* be despised in simple
rooms.
Minard’s Liniment Cures Garget in
Cc us
An Old Caidie’s Retort
fle fs an old caddie on an east coast
course, and being a noted figure on the
links he endeavors as far as possible
to caddie only for thoroughly efficient
golfers, Occasionally, however, he
finds himself accompanying a foozler
and on these occasions his dignity is
injured. 5
One day recently he found himself
caddying to an old gentleman who was
out, clearly, more for exercise than
for the love of the game and who was
playing shocking golf.
By the time the twelfth hole was
reached he had been in most of the
bunkers en route end had succeeded
in breaking a club. I think I shall
give up this hole, he remarked at last
to his indignant caddie. Na, na, re-
torted the old worthy bitterly; feenish
the course, sir—feenish the course. Ye
have got unothe four clubs to smash
yet an’ nine bunkers tae dac it in!
Dread of Asthrna makes countless
thousands miserable, Night after
night the atiacks return and even
when brief :espite is given the mind
is still in tor:naat from continual anti-
cipation. Dr. J. D. Kellogg’: Asthma
Remedy changes all this. Relief
comes and at once, while future at-
tacks are warded off, leaving the af-
flicted one in a stata of peacy and hap-
piness he once believed he could never
enjoy. Inexpensive and sold almost
every where,
oes
Open Windows all night
{t is difficul. to get doctors to agree
and to agree with the patient listener
For years I had been a slave to the
Open window, the fresh air at night.
That doctrine of the open bedroom
window wis my obseszion, but recent-
ly doutt crept in. By accident the
* bedroom window had 4>én closed, and
I slept peacefully and w ke refreshed
in a clcsed rom. here was no venti-
lation of the official medical variety.
To a medical journalist I put the prob-
lem of the window at night, and to
my astonishment, he told me that 1
am an anima: when I sleep and do not
want fresh air at all. -
Look at the animals. When they
sleep they choose che stuffiest nooks
they can find, and they know what is
best for them. Shut your bedroom
windows at nigh: and open them in the
morning. And when reflected on the
doormouse and the dog I ~~: encourag-
ed to tuck my nose with the other ani-
mals.
That Explains It
Dr. Lyman Abbett, at a luncheon at
the Colony Clu) in New York, was
good-humoredly arguing; the suffrage
question with a prominent suffragette.
Now, doctor, said the suffragette,
there's one thing you must admit. A
woman doesn't grow warped and hide-
bound so quiekly as a man. Her mind
keeps younger freshe:.
Well, no wo der, Dr. Abbott retort-
ed. Look how often she changes it!
———~_—
The minister's wife was busily en-
guged one afternoon on mending the
family c’othes whe: a neighbor called
for u friendiy chat. Afte. «a few mo-
ments of news and gossip the caller
remarked 18 she began to inspect a
besket of miscellaceous buctons: You
seem to be unusually well supplied
with buttons of all kinas. Why, there
‘Is one like my hustand had on his last
r’s suit. Indeed, said the min-
s wife with a slight smile. Well,|
all these buttuns were found in the!
contribution box, and [ ‘hought I might
as well muke some use of them. What
—must you go? Well, goodyye. Come
again soon,
Bad Blood
is the direct and inevitable result of
irregular or constipated bowels and
clogged-up kidneys and skin. The
undigested food and other waste mat-
ter which is allowed to accumulate
Poisons the blood and the whole
system, Dr, Morse’s Indian Root Pills
act directly on the bowels, : >gulating
them—on the kidneys, giving them -
ease and strength to properly filterthe
blood—and on the skin, opening up
the pores, For pure blood and good
health take
Dr. Morse’s ‘
indian Row: Pitts
Pcor Circulation
Cold feet and hands indicate poor
circtlation. Tho3o who suffer from
them should exercise every day in the
open air, bare their feet in cold wea-
ther and rub well with the palms of
the hands. Following the cold bath,
lift the body up on the t-es fifteen
times to increase the circulation of
the blood. Avold tight collars, cor-
sets and clothes. A very simple ar-
rangement for the ‘nprovement of a
too sallow or pale skin is said to He
in eating figs. Three or four if eaten
at a time is a prescription of a French
woman whose coinplexion is exquisite.
The drinking of orange juice the first
thing before breakfast is also an ex-
cellent remedy for whitening the skin,
and it is said any woman who will
specialize in her diet upon. orange
juice, honey, raisins, figs, brown bread
and pure water will retain the purity
of her skin until an advanced age.
Silencer for the Typewriter
The noisy clicking of the typewriter
will soon be no mote than’ disagree-
able memory, if the typewriter sl-
lencer whith a Cleveland man _ has
just invented proves a success. Pop-
ular Mechanics says: It does not make
the typewriter absolutely silent, but
it reduces the sharp click to a soft,
dull thud which {s not so uard on the
nerves. The noli. is so much reduc-
ed that an operator can 12ceive dicta-
tion given in e@ natural tone of voice
while the machine is running. The si-
lencer consists of a core for the plat-
cn which eliminates the greater part
of the noise rade by the type striking
the paper. .
WOMEN NEED
A SAFE TONIC
And There is Nothing Better Than Dr,
Williams’ Pink Pills for Toning up
the Blood
It is said that woman's work is nev-
er done, and it is » fect thal whether
in society or in the home her life is
filled with mcre cares and more wor-
ries than falls to th lot .: man. For
this reason women are compelled re-
gretfully to watch the growing pallor
of their cheeks, the coming of wrinkles
and the thinness that becomes more
distressing every day. .Every woman
knows that ill health,and worry is a
fatal enemy to beauty, and that good
health gives the plainest face an en-
during attractiveness,
What women fai. to realize is the!
fact that if the blood supply is kept}
rich and pure, the day of the coming!
of wrinkles, and pallor, dull eyes and
sharp headaches is immeasurably post-
poned. Dr. Wilifams’ Pink Pills are
literally worth cheir weight in gold to
growing girls and women of mature
years. They fill the veins with the
rich, red blood that brings brightness
to. the eye, the glow of+health to sal-
low cheeks, and charms away the head-
aches and backache ther render the
lives of s© many women constantly
miserable. .
Mrs. William Jones, Cro?’ ake,
Ont., says: “I feel that Dr, Williams’
Pink Pills saved my lif>. I was 80
badly run Jown that I could hardly
drag myself around. I was £9 blood-
less that I was as pale as a sheet,
and you could almost see through my
hands. In fact the doctor told me my
blood had all turned to water. I was
tuking medicine constantly, but with-
out benefit. My mother had so much
faith in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills that
she bought n two boxes and urge!
me to take them. How thankful I am
that I followed her advice. Before |
these were gone I began to feel better,
and I continued using the Pills until |
had taken five more boxes when I)
was again 2njoying the blessing of per-|
fect health, with a good color in my}
face, a good appetite, and I feel sure a
new lease of life. I will always, you
may be sure, be a warm friend of Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills.”
If you are weak or ailing begin to
cure yourself to-day with the rich red)
blood Dr. Wil'lams’ Pink Pills actual-|
ly make. If you do not find the Pills
at your dealer’s send 50 cents for a
box or “$2.50 for six boxes to the Dr.
Williams’ Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont., and thoy will be sent you by mail,
pest paid.
—_—
Simple Transposition
One of the artists had just finished
singing ‘Saily in Our Alley.’ The song,
appeared io affect Pogson. I gave
Lim a dig in the ribs and inquired:
Upset you, old man.
That song, ie began, brings to my
mind an incident of ma.y years ago;
which happened when I was a boy.
How well I rember the.com notion, the
wail of the guvernees. the shrieks ot)
the mater! I had a little sister nam-
ed Sally, and one day we were playing |
marbles (we called them alleys,) when
all of a sudden Sally swallowed one
of my best ‘glassies.’ ~
But what's the connection with the
song? I asked.
The alley in cur Saily, replied Pog-
son as he edged away.
poe
Boil Soda in It
When the inside sf a silver teapot
starts to tarnish, the followixg idea is
very good to make it look like new,
according to the Chicago Journal, Put}
a laige piece of washing sod into the!
teapot and fill with boiling water.
Then boil for one hour over a spirit
lamp and you will find it become.as
bright inside as out, and the soda will
not injure the silver in any way.
One day after coming out of jail the
pricst met 1.1 cr the street.
Well, Pat, said the clergyman, 1!
heard you wer dead,
Oh, sure, | heard it myself, replicd)
Pat, but I didn't besieve it.
Camphor-gum vill effectually drive
away mice, Scatter it on shelves and
in drawers, and no more trouble will
be experienced. I. will also prevent
moths if placed among woolens and
furs.
EEE
When a lamp dame begins to flicker
‘THE REVIEW, CLARESHOLM. ALTA.’
Many Useless Garments
Fortunately city flats have not the
storage room which old homes were
wont to have. And yet Low many
boxes and unused trunks and upper
shelves there are in closet that are
filled with useless clothing, warm
coats that might be keeping less fas-
tidious shoulders warm, good, well
made dresses that would warm the
heart as well as the body of some
less fortunate girl than the one who
bought them and has laid them aside
for a possible repairjng some day. How
many sgarments'have you stored away
whichh might be used?
The question of disposing of out of
date garment: isn't-#0°.auch whether
or not you can possibly use them some-
time as whether you need that partic-
ular bit of apparel cr whether you can
get along without it. Haven't you
laid a gown away with the best inten-
‘| tions of getting at it and remodelling
it and then found it carefully wrapped
up, absolutely useless to you, at your
next session of house cleaning?
Wouldn't it have been much better
to have decided about the gown im:
mediately, and if its remodc!ing prom:
ised to incur more time and labor
than you felt you could give it would
not it have been far inore sensible to
have given it to some one who could
use and to whom it would hav?
meant something?
Don't be a dog in the manger about
your possessions. Shae the blessing
that you have, even if they are only
the blessings of a few shelves of dis-
carded clothing.
A Typhoon in Japan
My room on the second floor rovk-
ed and swayed, and it seemed as
though the building could not hold to-
gether. After awhile I grew acc‘us-
tomed to the motion and the noise of
breaking glass and dropped off to
sleep, but « terrific crash right by my
ear brought me up with a start. The
sheet fron shutters of my windows
had finally succumbed to the fury of
the gale and although fully eight inch-
es outside of the glass, had bent in
until the windows, sash and all, lay
shattered on tlhe floor. A drenching
torrent whirled in through the cragk
between the resisting shutters, seized |
a screen and hurled it clear across|
the room on to my bed and then seiz- |
ed the bed and bouncec it savagely |
up and down. Then part of the roof
took leave and slid past my window
with the nerve racking clatter of coal
pouring into an emryty steel bin.
By dawn the typhoon was satisfied
with what it had done and moved on}
out to sea. I retrieved my saturat-
ed clothes and went downstairs.
Answers for wie Anxious
It is not always justifiable or even
necessary to lie when shown your)
friend's new baby. If it is as ugly as
sin tell him that it 'ooks exactly like
its father,
Young Husband—Never use that old
gag about having a cup with a sick
friend. There isn't even a young
ride tiiat will belleve it since the
vaudeville artists have used it so
often.
Lovelorn—Try a box of chocolates.
If that won't stop the grouch there is
ro hope.
A Merciful Farmer
A young lady from the city was go-
ing one summer to make her first visit
to a cousin in the country. At the
station she was met by the cousin, and |
af‘er a half hour's drive ho told her
they were approaching his farm.
In one of the broad fle!d: that met
the young lady's attentive eye stood a
windmill, and gathered around it,
some standing and some reclining,
were several hogs.
Well, that beat anything I ever
heard of! exclaimed the fair one. |
didn't know that you farmers were so
considerate.
What does? queried the farmer.
That over yonder, replied the city
girl, pointing a pretty finger. Just
think of having a ian out in the field
to keep those hogs ccol.
A Tall Story
The long leggede3t man we know
is our friend H, Bingha Pelmer. He
can take steps above five feet long,
in spite of which ha is devoted to;
btovse back riding.
Recenily he cume into tho office to
chat awhile, and we noticed that he
limped.
Corn? wes asked sympathetically.
Nope— accident, he answered, a3
answers one who cresn’t care to talk|
about something. That aroused our
curiosity, and we couldn't help show:
ing it, probably, for he sighed and con-
fessed:
I was riding through the park Mon-}
day, and I wes just riding along and
riding along and not thinking of any-|
thing in particular, and my foot stip-
ped ont of the ¢itrrup.
Well?
Well, the darn hors? stepped on it!
The Word Improve
Improve at first meant to “ebuke, 0/
condemn or disapprove. In the
French it means precisely the oppo-|
site of the English word, Milton |
uses it in the sense of increase. Only |
in the course of age did it take on the
present signification of bettering.
Very True.
Do not talk about yourself in com-;
pany. It can be dene go rzuch more
satisfactorily after you have left.
A
A Husdless Husband
They say that marriage is a com-
munity of interests, but my husband
has no consideration for me. Yester-
day he lugged a total stranger home |
for dinner, Not a word af warning.|
Is that any way to treat a wife?
Ob, that wasn’t so reprehensible.
You coull easily rustle up something
for dinner.
But there wasn't a thing in the!
| house. I had lost the market money
at bridge.
Is anybody waiting on you, madam?
{1 quired tha shop walker.
Yes, sir, retorted the middle-aged
matron, flercety, I reckon they're
| waiting to see if ‘ won't go away
put it out quickly, or there may be .n
explosion. It fs he half-filled lamp
that generates gas and explodes.
| without staying for the change that’s
,owing to me,
NO MORE NEURALGIA
HEADACHE CURED
A Journalist Tells cf The Advantag>
of keeping Nervilin. Handy
on the fhelf
Fifty years ago Nerviline was used
from coast to coast and, in thousands
of houses this trusty lIini:znent served
the entire family, cured all their minor
ills and kept the doctor's bill small.
To-day Nervilin., still holds first rank
Forestry Facts
The Dominion Forest Reserves are,
approximately, thirty-six thousan?
square miles in extent. On these re-
serves, especially in the Rock; Moun-
tains, are considerable areas of grass-
land, which by the n_w Forcst Reserv>
Regulations will be made available to
western cattl»owners, under suitable
restrictions. «As yet, few r no cat-
Ue have been pastured on these Re
serves, but the possibilities of this
new . ange will be understood from the
fact that more than 20,000,000 head
of cattle grazed on the National “or-
ests of the United States during the
in Canada among pain-relieving remed-
fes—scarcely a home you can find that/ cattle were grazed on Dominion Re-
doesn’t use it. | serves at the minimum charge of twen-
From Port Hope, Ont., Mr. W. T.} ty-five cents per head, the Dominion
Greenaway, of the Guid nowspaper| Forestry Branch would ccrive an an-
staff, writes: ‘For twenty years we nual revenue of at least $250,000 from
have used Nerviline in our home, and! this source alone, whiio the stimulus
not for the world would we be with-| these Regulation will undoubtedly
out it. Ac a remedy for all pain, ear-| give to stock-raising should eventually
ache, toothache, cramps, headache,| result in cheaper meat to the Canad-
and disordered stomach I know of no{ jan consumers.
preparation so useful and quick to re- In Sweden, the problem of brush dis-
lieve as Nerviline.” x posal after loggins operaticns in or
Let every mother give Nerviline a) der to prevent forest fires does not ex-
trial; it’s good for children, good for) jst, for in that country treo-tops and
old folks—you can rub it on asa lin) branches are all vsed far fuel and even
ment or take it internally. | the rine needles are collected and dis-
Wherever there fs pain, Nerviline tilled, the resulting extracts being
will cure it. Refese anything but) used in the manufacture of caramels
Nerviline, Large family bottles, 50c.;| for colds, and soap for medical pur-
trial size, 25c., at all dealers, or The! poses,
Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., 2nd; Phe loss occasioned by forest-fires
Kingston, Ont. on Dominion Forest Reserves and
Crown Timber!inc. in the West during
.Not Like Other Visitors the past year was ;robably the small-
The perfect baby of a South Side|est on record. This was largely due
mother had reached the ag when he) to the co-operation of the settlers, In-
can coo, an accomplishment in which/ dians and hunters in the werk of fire-
he indulges himself most o? the time} protection, ‘h.ch the Dominion Forest
when not otherwise engaged. Rangers secured by precep and ex-
He is the most welcome visitor I} ample. Fire warnin; were not con-
ever Lad, said the mother, proudly. He| fined to posters, but werc ‘> be found
just lies and talks to me vy the hour.} on railway time-‘ables anc attached)
Isn't that nice, replied tt.o caller,| to the shooting licenses of game hunt-
so unlike most visitors—they just talk| ers in Manitoba.
and lie to }ou by the hour. Wooden shyves have been in use in
Sngland for hundreds o! years and
large plantations of willow have been}
|
last fiscal year. If only one million
The Right Kind of Father
Young Harold was lato in attend-; made to supply wood for this purpose
ance for Sunday school and the teach-| alone, but that the use of wooden)
er inquired the cause. shoes should have extended to this}
I was going fiching but father would; country is not generally known, The
not let me, announced the lad. (United State. Depart rort of Agricul-
That's the right kind o* father to/ ture, in a bulletin on the use; of beech
have, replied the teacher. Did he! states tha. this wood is the favorite
give the reason: why h- would not, material in the manufacture of wood-
let you 30? en shoes which are largely worn by
Yes sir. He said | these having to werk in cold or wet
enough bait for two. places. They are good for about
two years and cost from sixty to sev-
enty-five cents a pair.
there wasn't
|
Pain Flees Befsrre It.—There i;
more virtue in a bottle of Dr. Thom-; In Southern Russia and Transcauca-
as’ Eclectric Oil as a subduer of pain, sia, the forests are very similar in
than in gallons of cther medicine. The, composition to those of southern Can- |
public know this and there are few, ada and the United States, Of the)
households throughcut the country, hardwoods, beech and oak are the
where it cannor be found. Thirty) most important’ species, the former,
years of use has familiarized the peo-| forming vast forests on tue slopes of}
ple with it, and made it a household, the Caucasus Mountains. Scotch pine, |
luedicine throughout the wesicrn| Oriental spruce and Nordmann fir}
world. rank first among the conifers. The}
latter sometimes attains 1 height of
| 150 feet and a diameter of eight feet,
being much superion in size and qual-
ity of wood to the balsa: fir, or bal-
Canada,
Gabe—I hear Miss Sweet has joia-
ed the great major‘ty.
Steve—She isn’t dead, is she?
Gabe—No; she married a man’ gam, of eastern
named Smith.
Minard’s Liniment Cures Diphtheria
An Apt Retort
Hostess ‘on seeing her ne-!
time)—I|
Care of the Sink
for the care cf the sink, as soon
Cand..
phew's fiance for the first
never should have known you from) 4: the dish washing 1s done wash
your photcgraph, Reggie told me you) every part of the sink with hot soapy
were s0 pretty. water, and scrub if necessary. Care-
Reggi»'s Fiance—No, I'm not pretty, tully wipe all wooden or stone work |
so I have io try to be alice, and it’s) apove and around the sink. Use al
such a bore. Have you ever tried? | ' ‘ewer to clean behind sink
| pipes, and do not leave & scrap of
That Mrs. Toplofty will carry her) food waste in or arotnd the sink.
pride to any length, | Leave no wet clothes about. Wash and}
I should say £0. Why, do you! hang them to dry in a current of air
know, she actually paid custom-house | j¢ possible,
duties on her diawonds rather than Flush the sink with boiling water
admit they were paste. every day and once a week with a!
2 PS ALTER ' strong solution of washing, soda. When
While travelling through the rural much greasy wate: has been poured
districts of Missourl a Look salesman! gown the sink pipe .. solution of caus-
approached a farmer and stood for) tie soda or lye shou'l be used, as
sevcral minutes importuning him to grease fs liable to collect and clog the |
buy the book he was selling. Present-! pipes and drain. Iron sinks should be|
ly the farmer blinked his eyes and! dry and if rusty siould be rubbed thor-
said: No, i’ ain't no use. I can't read. oughly wilh a paper wet with kero-|
The salesman paused a moment and) gene and thea with dry paper. Burn!
then said: But you must have some) the papers at o1ce after using. {!
one in your°*home that can ri ad. Your) the yink is to be left for son.» time un-|
wife your childrea—I know they would) ygeq rub with fresh beef or mutton fat |
bo interested. to keep it from rusting.
Yes, my daughter can read, replied
the Missourian, but she's got a book.
Poor Man
Mrs, Exe—My husband walks in his
sleep.
Mrs. Wye--1 wish I could get mine
— | to. His daily work is so confining |
‘the poor fellow gets hardly a bit of}
| exercise. |
Marriage is more often a disappoint-
ment than‘a failure.
Happy
New Year!
Bridg>
Nick—Are you a good card player? }
Dick—No. At bridge I'm a regular}
| Horatius,
Nick—Wha? 42 you mean—a regular |
} Horatius.
Dick—I keep the otherre from com-
)Mg across.
Inevitable
Old Skads lost every cent he had in
the world yesterday.
Gee! His heirs will be furious,
should think.
| Oh, I don’t think so.
How did he .ose it?
He died,
Are you acquainted with
|
if
|
|
the sweet, toacty flavor of
Post
Toasties
--crisp krinkles of choice
H Accounted For
First Politician—Jim told me the
| other day that he would have nothing
; to do with peanut politics,
| Second Ditto—Aw, he's nutty!
,
Hadn't Alt.rcd
That young Rawlings stays till a
Indian Corn----toasted to a |,
| very late hour, Nora. What does
|
delicate golden brown--ready
to eat direct from package?
} She says men haven't altered a bit,
| pa,
|
| Grandma had nade a litt?) jacket
for four-year-old Clu e, Being very
| proud of it, he marched out into the
| street to show it off. Very soon Le
{camo running back, greatly excited.
| Oh, grandma, grandma, he exclaim-
'ed, you have made an awful mistake.
You put one vuttos too many at the
/top and one bu‘tonl.ole too many at
| tLe bottem,
Wholesome, convenient
and immensely appetizing.
Ask the grocer-man
---anywhere
Canadian Postum Cereal Company,
| A Philadelphia newspaper says the
| flight to the fiel*s.
1) GUMPLETELY GUHEU
[tee
Itis a pathetic mistake (a
to accept drugs or alco- ;
holic mixtures when natur
craves nourishment to repair
the wasted body and restore
the vigor of health.
For forty years the best phy-
sicians have relied on the whole-
some predigested nourishment
in Scott’s Emulsion whichis totally
free from alcohol or opiates.
Scott’s Emulsion sharpens
the appetite—renews blood—
nourishes nerves—strengthens
bones and restores the courage
of health to make life bright.
Scott’s Emulsion sets in action
the very forces that promote health;
it is pure, rich strength.
Not ‘luch of a Rabbit
A little boy was carrying a pet rab-
bit in his erms when suddenly it
sprang from him and ran away. With
all haste he ran after it, calling fran-
tically: Come, bunny, come; come
back, bunny. But bunny did not come
back and did not cven pause in his
The little fellow
ceased his futile efforts to recapture
the fugitive and while the tears forced
themselves out of his eyes, shook his
fist and shouted: Well, run, then;
you're not much of « rabbit, anyhow.
One day a learned professor was ac-
costed by a very dirty little bootblack,
Shine your shoes, tir?
The professor was impressed by the
filthiness.of the boy’s face.
I don’t want a shine, my lad, said
he, but if you'll go and wash your
face, I'll give you a sixpence,
Alright sir, was the lad reply, .s
he went over to a neighboring fountain
and made his ablution:. Returning
he held out his .anc for the money.
Well, my lad, said th» professor, you
have earned your sixpence. Here it
is.
I cinna want it, .Id chap, returned
the boy with a lordly air. Ye keep
it and get yer hair cut.
quickly stops coughs, cures colds, and heals
the throat and lungs. rf no 25 ceote
Preferred the Short Ones
I was spe king with your father last
night, sald the young -nan.
Oh, were you, a.swered the sweet
young thing, iowering her eyes. What
were you t:Ik:np about?
About the likelibvuod of a war with
Mexico, Your father said if there
was a war nua hoped it would be short,
Ok, yes—I cnow Papa is very much
-pposed to long engagement.”
Perhaps That Helped
Miss Carter Rad not be-> success
ful in bringing 7oung Mr. Dodge to
her feet and in conrequence felt a tite
tle spitetul tcward him.
One evening they were having quite
a serious talk in the library,
Do you think, c¢ t.o young man,
that men progress after death?
Well, .2spouded the girl, if they do
rot it would almost scom useless for
some of them to dle.
Not Worrying Him
Wife (studying vocalism)—I wish,
dear, you'd hava double windows put
on. I am afraid my practising will
disturb the neighbors.
Hub—Well, if it does, it's up to
them to put on “cuble windows.
Labor Saving Postmen
One of the sights to be remember
ed in Portugal, said the Rev. H. O.
Fenton, lecturing at the Royal Photo
graphic society, was that of the post
man delivering his letters among the
congregation at church on Sunday,
thereby saving himself many a weary
walk,
Household Hints
This is a bum iecipe book, declared
the militant suffragette,
What's wrong?
Been all through it and not a re
cipe can I find fur .naking Lombs.
OF DYSPEPSIA
By Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets
We are coptionelly hearing from
grateful people who have had experb
ences like that of Miss Alice E. Cooper,
of Niagara Falls, Ont., who writes:
“I wish to express my gratitude to
you for the benefit I received from your
most wonderful Dyspepsia Tablets,
Having taken other medicines without
having received the slightest relief, I
heard of your Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia
Tablets and thought I would give them
a trial, I have been completely cured
of dyspepsia. I will be only too pleased
to advise any onc troubled with dyspepsia
to give them a fair trial.’’
Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets not only
ive the immediate relief from hearte
aay, flatulence, acidity of the stomach
and biliousness, which isso much needed,
but if taken regularly for a few days or
weeks they completely cure the most
aggravated cases of stomach trouble,
When for soc. you can get a box from
\
Lt, Windsor, Ont, {umbrella is vanishing. Somebody
others.
|} must be going home earlier than the)
our druggist, why go on suffering?
ational bars and Chemical Co, of
| Canada, Limited, Moatreal. 16
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
H. 0. Haslam
Barrister, Notary, Ete.
- »
/A Request That Surprised the
Sultan Abdul Hamid.
Money to Loan
OFFICES :—CLARK BLOCK
Claresholm, Alberta.
TALE OF A BADLY USED TURK.
————nmmcmm==ss A Truthful Account of an Experience
. s at the Court of the “Illuminator of
Fred Langmuir
the Universe’ That Reads Like a
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc.| Story From the Arabian Nignts.
Many fantastic stories hire telited of
Aldal Hatsid, the es suitin ‘Tor.
hey, nod bis court. ‘Phe ftotlowine,
bowever, culne to me frou na reliant
Money to Loan on Farm
Property
SBTC. QT Ph 9 . e Block, seuree, Writes a Contributer to Chit
OFFIC aa eh bees eile eden bers’ Journal aod onee whem bo teld
Claresholm, Alberta the story in computny one ot tay listen
ers told te that be persanatiy Kuew it
to be true, Tt is wort! oat plane
oe dione Seheheragide’s tatiotis bites
J. Ri. Wait, B. A. Not fat trot the sultans parece viv
Barrister. Notary Public & certain Ahined Rusti Eften tie on
oF the bundreds of clerks Cliploved ot
saepepe a) the sublime porte Atimerts dati
OFFICE :—THIKD AVENT M, Cousisted oot NHK t atthe
Claresholin, Alberta “ niewtions te pre
Seah et aceiei Doers. Bor this te wats su; wt
cere ao osihiry of 2000 pans
Cr. R. ee. Riggs Ss) peroinonth Th however. te \
ed this siinrv six titnes a vewe te
RESIDENT DENTIST Luenedt bitself ineky
¥. Conpared to nin af tis cat ne
vs ho the government offiees, At owas
8rd Avenue Opp. Wilton Hotel i enn han teuchen iene i
owned Tis own beuse, set '
« rent to pay. and fe suive tits
F. E. Harvey tite to oubtivirtina the tiny
Spee tial Re presenti itive {that supplied his Patngts vith tent
Sun Life Assurance Coa., "! \ EE LT
of Ganada oH ue a Let A reltin piattion
PHONE 117 Claresholm, Alta in his peneefot tons {there we
a t faeoribiat note lie ern
Wis ob wort eopeb ty it \thinne
G. Ra Brewster eter ii vere eoay year
VETERINARY SURGEON ~~ | Cent! RUG se
STOCK INSPECTOR FOR = PA} ,
THIS DISERIOR,
t ‘ i otthet the faeaed \
All Professional Services | ca rent ate =
STRICTEYAGASH fn iuar tlie weiclien eas
Office at residence on SHELVYR ST) the suitu Weare st
Cor. First Ave. South. we 42) ste World sy ws
Coaresholm, Alta. peael re tot for us ¢
——— pens 0 pia
i cr i , then fe the tea {
AYLING & SELLIGK ier nied won
“AA ' oud ty
Milliners aud) Dressmakers have aa Vian tte iowh
These weiss been dbsedect, de tat owa
ect UL ; 10} do tall ditefed suspic aan
4 But oat test, after twenty sears, AN
Wek fe open fon avmotutanents WNT edt yielded to Mis Wife's dnnpurtintty
ted eutpted the beautitul tra I
PARLORS —Tallway s 1 north of 1,0.) Jetiaee, bbere be entrasted the pencl
OF, Oper @s fo the ara ebircene ' wh
RESET aving the sultin’s fomliess fo
Glareshoim Band tnt promptly earried th t
Presence of tire Eilesimat: {tt nt
Under leadership of Prof. Larkin | Verse (he sultan gernedansiy aeces
er! ole 4 the Conmiited: Stineed t
} War HED fhe Wars mt ibbert ope
Open for EngageMeENtsS iio wisie wiser tans tue grow
Apply to A. E. Srranae, Srey | eb ol suck splendid benat
Claresholin, Alberta. {to olitppeted that Clie reception pour
Wiere the seribe awathed Che poiusai
OY the sovereign was tilted) wha
W. Youncrn. I. A. Brewer, bond of suspected hott) Chit Gers
Claresholm, Alta. Stayely, Alta.) Anmid was: presently hustled iwi
te pron with) the sdppesed reson
YOUN xt R tiomuries, He wis Chorunshiy contias
6 R & B EWER edo oby the roel treatment of th
1 grands and could Olly stathceer
A U C Ti ) i E ERS ao the tian Whe browene t aeties
Joni the tian who bro nuit the
All work promptly attended to penehes!
Hira Wn tte
and at the very lowest) prices fo prison he seen beeninie
eithor phone or drop us a line “the mai of Che peaches’ mid wit
aud we will be there. Jooked Upon as a tities jutiatie
Alter unity tiotths tClte stispleeted
LIVE-STOCK SALES A SPEGIALTY! bomb throwers, tneinding timed
hairs, Were brourtt before the erin
Get Our Terms Before Listing court. The told) bis stary ta the pidue
Sale Elsewhere. Ant asked that the grind « tiberiwuin
Ovrice av Restpence Former Hos | be entled te confirm bes words Pin
pital Building. (nde granted ths request and. wits
ents sii baet Lin 1 (huis
Phone 1020 Claresholm, Alta. ee a nea is a A . iy
Piinee ' onthe tad t hi
tivesie CHistippereaines hive fet tny
bern took the athpeied vile to tis
Own suit tn the puree ane wert to es
Plain matters fo the suitan
Phe Sutin Stbeerely sarey for the
THK S strive coum tded the
chabert { pavetuise Nttaseed Chiat
AUN Wish of his sihoutd tee faibtiod
Alimed vepilled that he Would wecept
not one, but three gifts. and theet) te
must tite Chem te Che sultan per
sonnily Phe snttin was iineh con.
cerned and ordered the seribe ushered
foto bis private study
TOOK THREE GIFTS |
‘and wife heard the
THE REVIEW, CLARES
MIX MAPS: AND MEALS.
An Easy Way of. Studying Geography ,
While You Eat.
| In the dining room of one family
there bang two large colored mups,
one of the world, the other of the state
, dn which they live,
| The parents and children are form-
‘ing the habit of talking during meals
about whut they read or hear, of
places and events outside the visible
horizon. And whenever any unfamill
ar place is mentioned one of the cbil-
dren Immediately leaves the table long
enough to legate it on the map, “It is
near such und such a town or river or
mountain,’ “Phat is where so and so
lives,” oor “Such a thing happened
there.” is the information usually add-
ed to the first statement,
They do not limit their conversation
to bookish things, but speak naturally
nbout whatever they are interested th,
turning to the Imeps as one looks ata
riilrond guide when traveling, to place
themselves. Tp this way bits of knowl
edve ure inked tovether, and as sight
knowledge requires so mfeb tess men
tal effort than ear koowledge it’ is
thore fun
Besides, the miaps, hanging low and
fn good tieht, minke a splendid: rainy
day gaine for the two younger ebil
dren, aged elght sud ten. ‘Phe mother,
sitting near with her sewing, gives
them “hard ones to find’ (ames of
nore or fess obscurity), und they keep
score us to which gets the most
“firsts.” calling twenty the game,
No wonder the whole world seems
like one big picture to this family, and
geography but a play.—Woman’s Home
Compiunion
LEAPING FOR THE FIRE NET.
Safe Jumps of Eight or Nine Stories
Have Been Made.
lifty-sixth street tene-
At # recent
ment tre in New York that resulted in
thore of no stnoke tari than a blaze a
noth and his wife were seen to get out
on the tedwe of a fifth story windows
The Cremen told them to writ a mo-
ment, thet there might be tie need to
nyt Phe tain eried that they were
suffocating and mast dunip
Nhe firemen stretched the net and
shot for then te poise themselves
roperly cet a one uta tite But
even while the ere shouting
the justractions th 0 »ikissed each
other, locked and te ad. ‘They
come down s tound sure ms a
plummet riebt inte the net. They te
honnded about fifteen feet and fell in
the net ngain in a sitting posture, still
embriced
The firemen let them gently down to
the sidewalk... They still sat there look.
ing at each other incredulously. ‘Then
they were told there was not even a
good tire to justify their jump tt had
from oa smonidering lot
rubbish. Phe man
news with expres:
sions of wonder, thankfulness and con-
demnation of their sitliness,
Jumps of eight nnd nine stories with:
out injuries have teen recorded ‘The
miakenp of the jumper is what counts
The firemen have te be prepared for
oil kinds Sometimes they have to
shift a few inches quickly because of
the bad judgment of distance shown by
the jumper. But in most cuses the leap
to the vet saves life.—New York Sun.
tl been stoke
of rags and other
A Little Paint Badly Aoplied.
The play “Lo Homme de Destin”
token from the stiee when its triumph
wis atthe zenith, One evening Nupo-
leon, accompanied by his frieud Duroc,
went in disguise to the Porte St. Mar: |
tin theater, where the piece was being |
performed, BKugene Chevalier appear:
as the man of destiny, They
bought a box, but bad hardly entered
it when the emperor broke forth in
violent execrations against the “fool
Innnagers * Et seemed that the decora-
tors hid left in the box pots of off and
was |
paint, and into these the emperor fad
stopped Wild with rage, he rushed
from the house and to make matters
Worse wis recognized in the lobby. Nea
paper mentioned the ineident, but by
order of the emperor the play was
never produced rit, dnd Chevatier
never ppenred in as the tain of
cesting=and all on aecount of a little
paint badly DYplled,
Theory aid Practice.
Little Beatrice was taking pinno les
vod dearning at the sate time
something of theory, Like many other
children, she disliked) practicing her
Luger exercises. One day her mother,
who was working in ao upstairs room,
Loticed a sudden iull in the playing
She looked down and saw Beatrice sit: |
ting perfectly motionless.
“Beatrice, why don't you practice?”
she called down sharply.
“L aim. practicing, mother,” replied
toe child with perfect self assurance.
“I'm practicing my theory.” — New
York Post.
Sons
Parliament and Congress.
The British parliament and the Onte- |
| ed States congress hive many points
"Sire suid) Atimed, “lo onsk for A
hatehet, the shim oot 200) pinsters and
@ copy of the Worn”
a , “Your desire is granted.” answered
Every line of business or pro: the sultan, ton condition that you ex:
fession to-day has its*specialists. Plam the meaning of your singuiar
We are Specialists in Meats. We Peejnent.”
know what the public desires, we Pee anit atin fpr WL Oe |
. 204) pPinsters Po oshall obtain a divoree |
know how to satisfy ‘those de- | gryny my wite, the originn! enuse of
sires. We claim to bea judge | ai imy tronbie: with the bateher Ein:
of what animals will yield the | tend te cut down my peach tree, and
choicest meats and we govern | UPEN the Werna fowish te swear an
our buying accordingly. You SHUT UREN CA ats Ate HOY RR
F a ; | Axnin so tong ast ive.”
get the benefit of our experience.
We keep track of the changing
8eAsSOns SO that Wwe may anticipate
4 Apelles' Masterpiece.
The masterpiece of Apeiles was the
} 4s subject not only to the provisions of
| while
Awerican,
your wants. Every service we Fenus Anndvoniene, “Venus Rising
Py 2 Sen! e@ Paria rps
can render you in buying we are From the sen h thing drops of
lndeand : : ees Witer from ber hair form oa transpare |
glad and prompt todo, These ent silver vet! over her form It cost |
are some of the reasons why we 8127,500 and was painted for the tem-
are every day adding to the list ple of Fseniapius at Cos. and after.
of our satistied customers. ward plreed bs Angustus in the tem-
ple whieh be dedicated to his: illus
0, P, WILLIAMS | triens patron, Julius Caesar Part of
| the famous pleture was infured and
THE CASH SHOP | no wne could be found to repair tt.—
PHONE II New York American
| =
Fresh and Cured ish and jie
Meats, F
3. MBB GPoultry in Season
Onr first step agreement
e@honld be to deciine before we argue.
of difference.
tically omnipotent,
The parliament is prac-
While the congress
the constitution, but to the president's |
veto. Congress represents the people,
parliament to all intents and
parposes is the people. —- New York
Thoughtless.,
“I offered Chollie # penny for his
thoughts. * |
“Did yon get them?
“No, he was of thonghts aa
uanal.”’— Boston Trivseript.
Saturday, |
Saturday takes its name from Sre- |
ter, the Roman Sorurnus, and for a |
long time it wae inoked on as the an-
Inckiest day of the week,
ove
‘land of
| science in the world
| would
| fe without Joy
HOLM, ALBERTA.
There is Practically No Limit to the
Life of Greenheart.
A most wonderful wood is that of
the trupical tree called greenhénrt,
The tree belongs to the jaurel family
and is exported muainiy from the 1s
Trinidad an British) Guiana,
The wood is so nearly indestructible
that no lhoit to its tite is Known, it is
used chietiv in ship and dock building.
The wood is proot against the white
ant on land wid the teredo in salt was
ter, A United States governuient tee
port says:
Greenheart bas been known to stand
In wharves tor over thirty years, and
logs that lave remained ander watee
for a hundred years are in perfectly
sound condition,
Greenheurt’s extraordinary
ance to decay is probably owing to the
presence of ao aikaluid Known as) ble
birine and aso to certain fesinous sube |
stinves Known ‘Phe latter
are reddish browt masses of living
cells that grow th solid taasses within
little cavities that they often nib cont.
pletely, As thes grow with Ute tree
they turn black aod make the wood of
the older trees bhiek
Asin all tropical trees,
is continueus through the year there
dre nono crowth tings, Pte trees
probably do uot tench tiaturity ander
YOU vers. A grecnhomrt tree is trout
sixty ten tradred feet to height. 1
is abevergreen Without Knots and tas
4 broad, open crown. Phe wood wells
fiibout seventy-tive pounds te the cube
foot nod resists a erushing toree ob
1200) pounds te the squate ied
Youth's Companiou,
CANOPIES ON THEIR HEADS.
Korea Wear the Largest
Hats In the World.
What would you think of
Hs ty loses.
Whose growth
People of
a hat that
Wis so darge it would safyly stetter
your tather, trother, sisters aud youre
self under it should a sudden rains
storm core apy Phe tea ot ivorert
ihe these enormous tats aud) would
not feel properly dressed without Chem,
Vhese hats look like great Gawer pots
ond found ttble sts feet aeress.
r vroWus ire nine feet iu teldit nad
tliree Tbebes Wide, tiaeh tke a elite
Hey ob gt ane story touse tiow do
you suppose these large, rome Head
coverings ure Kept on? Onder the
Clos)eiy Ate erp. bed
Whiell Dies tinder
The thaternit ot these tits 13
ou so finely split that if is tke
thrend. and disthy they are varnished
to keep out the sia abd rain and the
wind C
You know that the Borenn people ale
wWiys Wear cotton Clothing, so these
fats profect them fit tnote (haa
hats possibly could to the rainy
a cones: of olled paper are ae
tached to the big bamboo bead cover
ings in the shipe Of timueds, se
pose, that the rin pours aft of thene
just as water does of a duek s bane,
\ Worenn keeps tis tit on when we
should take it afl Soldiers weat black
or brown felt bats deeortited with red
horse bait or peneoek feathers, nd
hanging trom the sides, aver the ears
wnd around their peeks are oval tats
ef poreelain, atuber and a queer wind
of guim.—Sunbeun,
Hritny ds aostat
op ly
the
a padded stringy
Urs
inboe
SCHLN!
The Ungrateful Cuckoo.
To bear the Cuckoo's Cheers nete vou
might think be had the cleavest con
tle can hive tet.
ther memory vor tnorat sense or te
hot carry it off so gayty.
thost disreputable of birds, as
are guilty of nothing worse that pecs
endillos. ‘The jackdaw will steal for
the tnere fun of the thing, for he cua
tnike no possible use of plate or jews
elry. Sparrows are, of course, aotori
ous thieves, but they rink no highes
th crime than the sneaking plekpock-
ets. But the cuckoo, so to speak, is a
murderer from his cradle, Ale viotntes
the sanetity of a hospitibte thearth,
His first vietims ure his own foster |
brothers, and before De Uties bis wines
ou the first tight he tobrued
fraternal blood, dike any Atmunmitn ot
Bajazet.—London Saturday Review,
in
She Couldn't Hear Them.
“Towns surprised to tearm that that
mon is married.”
‘How did you learn it? You may be
mistuken
“No chance for a mistake, He sass
he is In favor of going back to the old
shin plisters and having stall bills toe
6, 10, 25 and 40 cents.”
“But | dont see'—
“Bills don't rattle togetter:'= Hone |
tun Post.
Returning a Favor.
“It's going to be war to the gnife,”
declared the suburban man, who was
feeding bis chickens,
“What now?" asked the friend,
“Why, Blinks sent tne a box of axle
grease nnd advised me tu use it on UIE
) lawn mower,”
“Well?”
“Well, I sent it back and told him to
use tt on bis daughter's voice."—Lip |
pincortt's,
Wrong Both Ways.
“What is that tune you were playing
on the bugle last night?"
“That was not a bugle.” replied the
cornet virtuoso rather stitfly,
"Oh, well, if sou're so particular as
all that it didn’t sound like a tnne at-
*"—Exchaunge.
ther,’
Perseverance,
Few things are impossible In theme
selves, It is not so much means as
perseverance that is wanting to bring |
them to a successful issue.—Rochefuue
| pana.
Life without ilberty Is joyless, but
inay be great, The
greatness of life is sacrifice. ~ Ouida,
|r” WONDERFUL WOOD. ry,
Postips:
Che |
in
UNION
IBYAQNIES
OF CANADA
Significant Progress
The figures below show
more impressively than words
the progress which the Union
Bank of Canada is making.
Consider them carefully,
1909 1910 1911 1912
Paid-up Capital | 3 902,670 aie ane 4,914,120] 5,000,000
Seriutun Beets 1/900,000 388} 8,129,085] 8,875,483
Total Assets. . [12,516,480 54,434,822 | 69,408,227
o>
299 SOOT BI
Deposits.... 34.209, "409, 6S1 460] 55,648,853
resist: |
BRANCH : Ww.
Re SHANKS, Manager.
Brauch also at Barons
| CLARESHOLM
Dont be satisfied with
anything less than an
Edison ‘Phonograph
Throw, =.71't, history of sound reproduction Mr. Edison
has blava#~' _atail. Every important step has been con-
ceived first'{n his mind, He is the acknowledged master
of acoustics throughout the world. His recent triumph is
the Blue Amberol Record. :
It came, after countless ex periments, with all its strength of vol-
uine, sweetness of quality and lasting endurance. To bring out the
remarka| ble tone of this new
recoid demanded a new r pro-
ducer. le invented it —the
Diamond- Point Peproducer.
With it there is none of the an-
noyance of changing the needle
after each record. The diamond
is as much a part of the phono-
graph as its beautiful cabinet.
H fear a Blue Aeiberol= th
ask. Your Edison dealer will
as many as you like, We
teat to leave the verdici with your ear,
vallwe
lav over
are con.
a
2
a
TRACE MARK Oak. Di 4
r ° Va! jamoni
ful Spring Motor
A ciiezin QEdiron. ” IR ecorce ania
ie Ambero! Records
A compleie line of Edison Phonographs and Records will be found at
©. L. Reinecke
oe otis nee Se OPS AA I
S——_——0SS——_0 ae Oa OL I0
Don’t Forget Your Insurance
If your insurance has
only a week to run before
being renewed don’t neg-
lect it but come and see
about it or phoneand have
it attended to by T. L.
Bernard before it is too
late.
SURANCE
RENTAL AGENT
Claresholm Realty Co.
Phone Office, Railway St. Claresholm, Alta,
OS OOO IO
S60 0
| Pal CUROPEAN PLAN $1.00 PER DAY
|
0
| REAL ESTATE LOANS AND IN
>
Ceritl Kotel
COTE & BELL, Props.
Corner 4th Ave. and 8rd St.
PHONE 6244 CALCARY, ALTA
———oS—
a ———Sa ——— —™ OS ee
REX THEATR Four Doors South of the
Queen's Hotel
HIGH CLASS
Moving Pictures and Music
Every Night From 8 to 10.30
COMPLETE CHANGE OF PICTURES EVERY MON. WED. & FRI.
ADMISSION: --Adults 25, Children 15 Cents.
in building a sloping floor and making other
mie tims as are shown in the best theatres ii
wat they will get their moneys worth,
: J. HALL, Manager.
| ee 5
I have e to considernbl
structural rations xhibit
large cithes and can assure everye
HAD A NOSE FOR NEWS.
He Got a “Scoop” by, Knowing a Cabi-
net Minister's Weakness.
How a cibinet secret was revealed
in a most amazing fashion by a needy
and adventurous penuy a liner at the
end of his resvurces is related by
Mr. J. DY Symon tn “The Press and
Its Story.” It wus during the ad-
ministration of the Duke of Welling-
ton, at a juncture when the opposition
would have given anything for some
hint of the cabinet’s policy. The secret
was well guarded until une evening,
Just at the rising of the house, a penny
a liner, who bad been banging about
Westminster waiting for something to
turn up, saw the duke emerge from
the house of lords uccowpanied by one
of his colleagues.
Now, the duke in his later years
was very hard of bearing and cherish-
ed that not uncommon Illusion of the
d that in order to make other peo-
phy Sear be, (oo, must sbout. It oc-
curred to the scribe that if he would
only follow tbe ‘prime minister he
might hear something to his advan-
tage.
The night was dark, so the penny
a liner managed to keep well within
earshot and yet to escitpe remark by
those he was following. He had not
gone very far before he knew he was
in luck’s way. The duke was actually
talking about the situation in his usual
joud tones and gradually, proceeded
to unfold the poliey ot the cabinet. The
penny a liner listened with all his
ears and kept will within range of the
minister all the way to Apsley house,
Thereupon, with beating heart, be
sought some friendly refuge and com-
mitted his discovery to writing. This
done, he lost no tine in calling upon
the editor of one of the lending op-
position papers.
The editor glanced over the article
and was thunderstruek when he realiz-
ed its nature, Here was the very thing
for which the party bad been praying.
Naturally the editor inquired how so
uninfluential a person contd have come
by such very” private information
Being sitisfied, bowever, of the truth
of Sy mnan’s story, he decided to print
it an gave the reporter a handsome
check for bis) enterprise Next diay
the appearance of the news, re-enfore-
ed by a jieading article. spread con.
sternation in the government camp
Who wis the traitor?
Somewhat of a ohne and cry was
raised, and the duke'’s friend fell un-
der suspicion. Relations between the
prime minister and bis colleagne were
in fact somewhat strained, ontil at
Jast the true story of the remarkable
discovery was given to the world.
Ingenuous.
Little Caillou, a lrenen boy, was al-
lowed to tike luncheon with bis moth:
er and her guests on condition that he
ute only that which was offered bim,
miuking no comment. By and by, how-
ever, When dessert was on the table,
Caillon could not) resist a certain
temptation.
“Please, waminn, may | bave a sar
dine?"
“No, my son; you know very well
that you may not have a sardine,
such things are not allowed you, And
1 thought you promised me not to asl
for anything special to eat.”
"Oh, | don't want to eat it.’ was
the little boy's ingenuous and astonish.
ing uuswer "t just want to put te to
iy ghiss of water and see it douat."—
Chicago Record-Herald.
The Rest Was Easy.
Mrs. Gordon bad recepily moved Into
the neighborhood,
“LT thought 1 would come nnd tell sou
that your James has been fighting with
ny Edward,” said one of the neigh-
bors one morning as she called at Mrs
Gard door, “and settle the matter
if | could.”
“Well, for ny part.” responded Mrs.
“} have no time to
about the
myselt
Gordon haughtily.
enter inty any discussion
shildren’s quarrels, 1 consider
tbove such trifling things.”
“I'm delighted to hear it’ was the
reply, "EH send olames over on a
stretcher In an hour or two.'—Life.
Pretty. Dead.
A native of a boom town who had
noved uway happened on one of his
ld neighbors who still lived there and
inked hima about the towne
“Oh, it's nwol.” replied the unfortu-
nute neighbor, “Weudest place you
ver saw, Say, you Know Jones, don't
you? = Well, he dropped dead in front
yf the postottice Sunday, and they
lidn't find the body till lbursday.”—
Cvery body's,
ry
ye
Easy For Him.
“How much alimony did bis wife de |
nand?”
“Twenty dollars a week more than
ia salary.” /
“How foolish!"
“Well, she sald she guessed he could
fford it since be always had spent
wice what he earned.”—Judye.
No Degrees.
A filppant young woman remarks
bat her father can turn out bachelors
| great deal quicker than any college.
Je doesn't do it by degrees, she says,
Je begins the graduation exercises
wounptiy at 11 op. m. and they are
Iways finished two winutes tater.—
foston ‘Trauscript.
Social Ambition.
“They say that Mars is not now hab-
tuble, bue will fe seon”
“Gosh, Id like to help settle ft!
Phink of heing among the first tumi-
les of yu entire planet!"~Kansus City
ourndgs+
Hope ia the dream of the mao awake,
- Pinto.
that’
THE REVIEW, CLAKESHOLM, ALBERTA.
BUSSORAH A FILTHY TOWN. | THEY DON'T. WASTE ‘WORDS.
A Visit to the Avocryohal Home vf
Sindbad the Savior.
We were on our way to Bussorah,
famous as the apocryphal home of
Sindbad the Sailor. Bussorah is the
seaport of Bagdad, from which It is
distant about 500 miles by river.
Bussorah in the summer is nothing
less than a fiery furnace, for the ther-
mometer registers more than 100 de-
grees F. in the shade during 120 con-
secutive days, and the wean tempera-
ture, night and day, for upwards of
four mouths, is about 5 degrees.
Malarial fevers, dysentery und agne
are prevalent, and the town
quently visited by plague and cholera,
and yet, thanks to the cool winter and
| prevailing uorth winds, the place is
not essentially untealthy for those
who are acclimatized,
The babits and wants of the popu-
lation are simple and are likely to. re-
miin so for some time to come, but
the sunitary state of the town is de-
plorable. The creeks, which are tidal,
supply it with drinking water, but are
| used indiscriminately for all bouse-
bold purposes, and the stench arising
from them at low water is overpow-
ering
The governor geueral of the province
of Bussoral had his private residence
in the upper story of a titsy lath and
plaster editice overlooking the main
rond. The walls of bis bouse could not
have been more than six inehes thick,
aud it was full of windows, | The
ground floor seemed to be a stable and
was occupied by gouts.
As our carriage approached, churn.
ing up the mud which lay ankle deep
and bumping over the bollows and ob-
structions which bad so far escaped
the attention of a not too observant
municipality, Wwe saw the governors
head appear at an upper windew and
that of a she gont at a lower one
simultaneously,
The governor, a middle aged man of
dignitied bearing, greeted us gravely
aud kindly, From tis conversation be
appeared to be somewhat of a pedant,
imbned with the chnuuvinistic tenden-
cles of the young Turk, and a harden:
ed bureaucrat
His excellency’s salutations as he
bide us farewell were expressed with
becoming gravity: “We trast that God
mity be plensed to preserve your ex-
cellency’s health. Our town ts yours,
us well as our house. May we order
our soldiers to aceoupiny you on your
tide to Zobeir? Your person is more
precious to us than our eves, and there
are evil men, enemles of our lord the
sultan, abroud in the desert.’—Cham-
bers’ Journal. -
THE RAZORBACK HOG,
Here’s His Portrait, and it Doesn't
Flatter Him a Bit.
In physique and mentality the razor-
back differs even more from a domes-
tic hog than a wild goose does from a
tatne one. Shaped in front like a thin
wedge, he can go through laurel thick-
ets like a bear. Armored with tough
hide, enshioned by bristles, he despises
thorns, brambles and rattlesnakes alike.
His extravagantly long snout cap scent
like a cat's and yet burrow, uproot,
Foverturn, as if made of metal,
The tong legs, thin) Hanks, pliant
hoofs, fit him to run like n deer and
Clink like a gout. In courage and sa-
wucity. he outranks all ather bensts
Acwarrior born, he is aise a strategist
of the first order Like man, he lives
| Hoot! Hife and unites with others
of his kind for purposes of defense
The pig is the onty large mammal t
| know of, besides man, whose eves will
not shine by reflected tight- they are
foo bold amd crafty, bo owit. ‘Phe razor.
taek bos aomind of nis own not in-
stinet, but mind ‘whatever psychoto-
xists thay say. He thinks. Anybody
coh see that when te is not rooting or
Slevping be is studving devilment,
He shows remarkable understanding
of tutan especiilly profane
speech, and even an canennoy aft of
reading men's thonehts whenever those
thoughts are directed agninst the
peace and dignity of pigship. He bears
grudges, broods over indignities and
plans redresses for the torrow or tae
week after. If he cannot get even with
you be will fay for your unsuspecting
friend. And nt last, when arrested in
his crime and lodged in the pen, be is
liable to attacks of mania from sheer
| helpless rage.— From Horace Kephart’s
; "Our Southern Highhiuders.”
Opposite Opinions.
If Marie Corelli has a large circle of
renders who admire her books, there
is also 8 number of people who do not.
Two men belonging to the opposing
cumps, both well known journalists,
Were discussing her the other diy,
“What | like about Miss Corelli,”
suld the one who admired the author-
ess, "is that she is so—su alive!”
"Yes, that's what | object to!" re-
torted the othet.—London Spectator,
speech,
Did He?
Yeast—Have any trouble getting tn
the house Inst night when you went
home from the club? Crimsonbeak—
| Did 1? Say, do sou remember how
rusty that night key was last night? |
Well, look how bright it is now.—
Yonkers Statesman.
A Halfway Mark.
Close to the tain round connecting
} the towns of Bastpott and Calnis, Me,
jstinds a unique little monument erect-
«do to miurk A most Interesting geo-
graphient point, for it is exactly half.
way between the equator and north
1ole
The Only Sure Way.
Gnbe- Smith brags that he keeps all
of his promises, | wonder
maniges to do it’ Steve--He pever
wakes uny., Cincinuati Enouirer,
how he |
is fre- 4
| A well
‘Nyasaland Natives Exist In a State of
Partial Coma. .
Referring to the outive peculiarities
in Nyasnalond, the author of “Hunting
ithe Elephant In Africa,” Captain CG, H,
Stigand, comments ou a certain state
of comm inte which the “boys” descend
when there is no active work for them
to do, or iit least when there is no com.
| pulsion to do it. He believesctiat the
nitive is capable of assuming au state
jin whieh the mind is absottely de-
{trehed and not working, and when to
lsuch astute he is only recalled by a
sturt to his present surroundings,
The life of the head man of a vil-
Hlage in Nyasalid, when not engaged
in the strenuous pursuit of his official
duties, is something like this: At sun-
rise he crawls out of tis but and sits
outside, After on short time bis wife
eruwils out and offers hind some food,
He eats this nod then makes bis way
fo on tree, perhaps a hundred) vards
from the vik » Under this he sits in
deep fbstra till about noon a
ehild brings finn some food and water
After portaking of this he moves a lit
tion
the so us to pet the afternoon shade.
He then sits tn deep teditation until
sunset when he criuwts into his but
tind goes to sleep
Sometitves he is joined by a few oth.
erold men under his tree, They hardly
ever spetk tacench other, and tf they
say anything it is to make some obvi- |
ous remark. as, “Phere is a dog.” “Yes, |
ft isa de eon’ “Ab” and a further
period of silence,
AADE HIMSELF AT HOME.
When He Got Aironen His Standing
Was Unauestioned.
Robert
TH VURAURCUREDITEll Avo A WTAT) mad, that Shelley wis spoiled by tive
: se ba story ay | ; ;
thes in ‘i ‘ i acu ‘aut one of ‘his TBE NYE ASO See rE IE HLS USOC J \su
: : Wek bane aT t id Was aman who did net Know the
rare : » Anders ys he ) \ head |
eiiative: st H, " eaaih ae U any world, that Ruskin is inenpabie of
arpes ane at skew one day iG
7 sit yr ae be ne +a i . ry comprehending politieat economy, that
Athos the WIssenLeers Wis ft AW
a > rh nh omere nwekgoumrd ane bse
honed young Missourian who looked 4 la ds there bla ned Hi Ibsen
' ) is Zoln with a wooden tor hes
heat ds found ous the jaylawhers
ther Ny es mousicion necepted by tis aoskitted tise
Orn Selves “ty %
“Give me ver vallbles.! Anderson dee) tener ts villtied by his fellow tusi-
4 NaN ; ORG xg Bus a ‘i 1 on lent cnlture of
Inainded of the youth, as he went down SHE TE wis the mustent cuiture of
the tit Burope which prononneed Wigner the
e ihe F
“Ain't got pene.’ answered the Hifetiot of Moendelssoti aud
youn squirret tant beer ;
“Where ved It is not cneush ro say with the brit.
“To join An ns favhawkers” linnt anther of “Contemporains” that
The lewder sized tim up om bit mitenipornoy eriticism ds dere conver:
° t Ol ‘ } } . ttle he ’
“Kin ve swine the Missoury river? suttons itis often tHe thore than mere
he osted him trossip One is offen tnelined to ques
“Reckon so” the young man oan. tien with Lowell whether the powers
swered
“Contd ye killa tonn?
“Reekot so" ~
Andersen stepped) forward and spat
iv the youngsters free. ‘Phe youth
bonnded at the jaybawker fike a cnt,
Jenaght fim full in the fee with a
{right swine and went dowu ou top of
him, KieKing and clawing,
The Jayiawkers putled the young de-
Kol up,
thon off theit leader, and be
“You belong.” be said :
him oa huwse’= St. Louis Post bDis-
pateb.
Recognition Comes Slowly.
“The late ANttved Russet Wallace,
the codiscoverer with Darwin of evo
tution. tind a tad row to hoe at first,”
said a physiotogist.
) “Poor Dro Watliee bid in faet such
for vary bard row to hoe that he couldn't
| afford to marry till he was sixty-three,
When to balance tatters he married a
young girl of eichteen by whom
| hid a son and a daughter,
“TL commiserated in Loudon hist sum
fomer with Dr Wallace
| “it was too mid’ 1
bim ‘A man of genius
{ crninped with poverty cil past middle
| life! It was tuo bad
} "My friend! Dr Walliee replied,
)calways you will tind the tire of genins
| tukes a Jong, long time to make the
| pot boil’ "—Detroit Free Press,
| Bad For the Nea
once said to
like you
William Dewu Howells, according ‘to
the Washington Star was adimonist
ing.» voung Dovelist, who after writ-
tng on fine novel bad produeed oniy
sheht commercial things,
“Two crities' he suld to the voung
mon, “were discussing a certain au
thor,
“'His jaurels, snid the first eritte,
already seem faded aad bederagaihad
“oThar’ the other entice agvreed, ‘is
because he bus been resting on them’!
In the Customary Place.
Known Logiish bishap same
thie since loxé bis third wife. A cler
jevinan who had known the first wife
| see the grave
returned from Africa and wanted to
| dratand saw the verger
"Can sou tell me where the bishop's |
wife is buried?”
"Well, sir’ replied the verger, "1
don't know for certain, but he mostly
buries ‘em oat Brompton.” London
Mail.
No Wedding Bells.
The mutual friend was speaking:
“If you love the girl and the parents
fon both sides are willing and you have
| $1,000,000 exeh 1
see ono Penson
you should not be married.”
“Just one thing prevents it.”
"Yes?"
“Ves.
why
She won't have me.”—Spur.
Her Chin.
Dawson—The treint features plainiy
indicate charneter and disposition in
selecting your wife. were you governed
by ber chin’ Spenlow-No, but t have
beep ever since We niirried
‘ In the Sideshow.
Visitor- These (warts of cours are
retty ble! Showin = Pardon me,
ir: these are giant dwarfs. —~ Meggen-
erfer Blatter
Totred like fire, ft makes even
ht rubbish deadiy. George hot.
Thorpe. an old Missourt stage |
he
tle called nt the cnthe |
GENIUS AND A CLUB.
Sontemporary Criticism as an Unfair
and Merciless Weapon.
The world his never seen an age in
which there was more excuse for ques:
Honing she validity of contemporary
judgment. It would be the height of
folly.to expect posterity te nuthentt:
nite the vaporings of an appreciation
which jn shifting Ws stress from the
aniversal to the personnel tus changed
trom criticism into colloquy, from celine
¢ into causerie. Tndecd, it is nothing
ess thin a truism that the experience
of the artist In all ages, necording to
thé verdict of history, is identioat with
tself,
ln the words of Sidney Lanier, “* * *
the artist shill pot forth tatibty and
ovingly the very best aud highest that
is within hin utterty recurdiess of
sontempority eriticistn Wihtait possthta |
shit Gain Conbenipowmiery eritionan set
Mp) to respect thatceriticeism white
stoned Stephen, heoted Pail for a tind.
an, bound Columbus To ebatus, drove
Onnte inte exe, taade Sloakespeare
write the sonnet ‘When di Diserace
With Portune and Mens Eyess give
Milton 05) for ‘Pitradise Last’ Kept
Srimuel fotioson Coolie His eels ory
ford Chesteriields doorstep, reviled
Shelley as an niedean dog Killed: heats,
crbeked joes on cl nbert, Bee
hoven, Berliog aud \ er aited conte |
Mitted so niainy other Tapious Lotties
ind stupidities that a thousand: letters
eould uot
like this
| logue them?”
stlice even to enti
°
| The verdict of the “fntellectuels’ has |
Patways been oa ‘veritable stumblig
| block in the path of genius
“Its from men of established liters
ny reputation.”
“that we learn that Witllit Bhike
Wis
that be in criticism ere really the pow.
ers that ought to be.--from Archibatd
Henderson's “European Dramatists.”
PRETTY SAFE PRISON.
Blaodhounds Guarded One Exit, Man
Eating Sharks the Other.
Shark skin, shark teeth, shark ofl,
shark meat and several other byprod-
tiets of the dead shark are articles of
xreuter or Jesser utility, but 1 have
never heard of but one instance where
the living shark was pur to a prac
| tient use. This, says Lewis KR. Freee
tinin, was When they used him as a
prison guard in the old days when
British convicts were transported to
\ustralia, the monsters serving this
purpose for many vears at the Port
Arthur settlement, ten miles south of
Hobart, the present capital of Tas-
tina. The prisons at this point, some
of which may still be seen, were situ-
ute’ npop a peninsula whose only con-
tien with the maininnd was by a
narrow strip of sand called, from
configuration, the EKaglehawk's
1 one
fot,
ts
Neck
The convicts were allowed consider-
able tiberty on the peninsula, but to
prevent their escape to the mainland
halt starved bloodhounds were chained
nil the way across the narrowest por-
tion of the neck. Several prisoners
having avolded the “bloodhound zone”
by switiming, the authorities adopted
the effective but grewsome expedient
of feeding the sharks at that point sev.
eral thes a day. tua few weeks the
plaice became Hterally alive with the
vorseious man enters, and from that
tine on the only convict who ever es-
eaped accomplished his purpose by roll.
ing himself up in kelp and working
wong, ineh by ineh, timing his move
thents te correspond with those of the
other Poips of seaweed that were be-
ing riled by the surf.—Wide World
Magazine
H -
| The Economist.
“It Isn't by petty and ridicuions
economies that men succeed.” said
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. “Some peo
ple seem to think that to get ricb one
tuust economize Hike Blanes. Blanco’s
faithful old dog had turned sickly and
| sivage, and so Blanco said to bis wife
on arriving home from business Sature
day evening:
“TH shoot ‘Towser tomorrow morn
ing before chureh,
“Bhlinco paused, then added sternly:
"'So remember, please, that he won't
heed upy breakfast.’"’—Cincinnatl ne
quirer,
It Was All Within.
A practical joker carried an onion fn
his pocket to the depot when bidding
firewell to a young lady and took a
bite now und then to induce tears, Bee
fore the train departed be bad eaten
| the entire onion, Che young lady, per-
jvelving the situation, remarked, “Ab,
| You have swallowed your grief!"
Bound to Have the Lace.
} In Evigtuk, Greentind, the women
LF a then dress alike, ind the only way
Sn tell n female from an male is by the
ive decorations which the members of
the wenker sex wear on their collars,
Aid to Genius,
Our tdea Is that there ought to be at
east three children in every family, so
that if one of thei shuuld become a
genius the other two could suppors
| bim.—Galvestup Newa,
dsserts Bernard Shaw, |
A Good Resolution
Let one of your good res-
olutions be to buy your To-
baceos, Cigars and Cigarettes
and any other supplies or
Smokers’ Sundries where a
wide range of the choicest
goods is always kept in stock
and where vou are neverask
ed to take inferior, shopdried,
dust covered, germ laden
goods, — Our patronage is so
extended that we are always
replenishing our stock. That
gtenantees vou Fresh, Clean,
Choice and your
Special among them,
Tobnecos,
| ~
WILTON HOTEL TOBACCO STAND
J. A. MITCHELL, Prop.
gt eg i Pace er SO et gs Be
| set
BOG USITSTEDVDOG VHOTE LS 2498 O0FB9SFSSTTVERE :
NOVELTIES:
im Ties of every Descript-
ion
x
ara?
New Supply of frilling, wide and
narrow, Cream Ecru
Lace and Collar Sets
New Pearl Trimmings
SEE WINDOW DISPLAY
DSBS wOO4VIt
Sapusaweueccawecuewunnuwe
a
?
| Poa Ren in nt Se 2) A a ee Ren ade til
| >
| A Fresh Supply of Groceries 3
always on hend. 5
»
5000 Dozen Eggs wanted, €. 9
Phone us your order. 3
ee °
M. FISHEK
Claresholm Departmental Store 2
BOOOO0O0O08OOO88888S 00086 E60F% BEET BEG O7®
——— 0a ee eS
SHELF AND HEAVY. 3
HARDWARE
New Gcods Arriving Daily
McLary’s Famous Stoves
Moffatt’s National Stoves
; ;
Full line of
Steven's Paints
Moffatt & Sons Glaresholm
——_—k a OL tO
GRAND
ANNUAL CLEARANGE SALE
of all Winter Goods on hand, con-
sisting of the following goods, viz:
Say To, Tew,
—_—__ SS Sa 10
30
Fur Coats, Cloth Overcoats, Stanfields Underwear, Fit-
Reform Clothing, Overshoes, Felt Shoes,
Sheepskin Lined Coats, Gloves, Mitts and
Hose, at
25 Per Cent Below Selling Price,
for Cash Only
CARL J. BRAREN
RN ae ttt
Se UT NNT V YY OV TN
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
Purely vegstable
—act surely and
ply on the
iver. Cure
Biliousness,
2
ache,
Dizzi-
ness, and Indigestion.
do thele duty,
They
Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price.
Genuine must bear Signature
Quality, flavour, and
perfect cooking,
combined,
The maximum
of nourishment
and palatability,
Just heat — then serve
mininium trouble
4
REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER ANB BHIL®,
Mrs. WinsLow’'s SootHinc Syrup-has be
MILLIONS
RB WHIL)
r a3 CURES WIN
$s the best remeay for DIARRHOIA,
Bolutely harmless, Be sure and ask tor “Mra,
Wiuslow's Soothing Syrup,” and take wo ottegs
kind ‘Swenty-five cents @ bottle
t
STANLEY LIGHTFOOT
PATENT SOLICITOR AND ATTORNEY
LUMSDEN BLOG.(“foud!) TORONTO,
WRITE FOR TERMS, M.37IS.
1S NEW FRENCH REMEDY. Nol. 02. 8.3.
lm | E Usedin Freack
Hospitals with
eat SUCCESS, CURES CHRONIC WEAKNESS, LOST VIGOR
Yente KIDNEY, BLADDER, DISEASES, BLOOD POISO!
PILES. EITHER NO. DRUGGISTS or MAIL $1. PosT ¢
gay NEW DRAGRG(TASTELESS) FORMOP gasy TO
Tag
SAFE AND
ON LASTING COURS,
THAT TRADE MARKED WORD ‘THRRAPION 18 OB
T. GOVT. STAMP AFFIXED TO ALL GENUINE PACEST
Good Wages
and healthful outdoor work,
spring, summer and fall. Top-
notch men earn $20 a day—
good men $5 and $10—
Running Gas Tractors
You can learn at home by mail and
get practical experience at our all-
the-year residetice school at LaPorte,
also at one of our traveling practice
schools in your vicinity. AY tite for
information.
Indiana School of Tractioneering
415 Pime Lake Ave. La Porte, Indiana
Deceived
What's the matte, littie Loy?
Maw’'s gone and drowned all
kittens.
Dear, dear, nov tuat’s too bad.
Yep, an’ she promised —boo-hoo—
that I cud dc it.
the
Minard’s Liniicent Cures Colde, Etc.
Mr. Evans enterod a Ne York res:
taurant and saw a friend seated at
one of the tables.
Hello, Loveall, he sata,
you?
Oh, pretty well, replied Loveall.
What are you doing now? inquired
Evans.
Well, vhen I came ifn here, said
Lovell, about two hours ago I was not
in business, but I've changed since}
then. 1am a waiter now.
how are
Stranger—How long since you made
dn arrest?
Constable— Quite a considerable}
cpell. Iam going a little slow about
hauling them in just now. We have}
no place to jut them in excepting |
Cy Tedder’s chcken house, and Cy
has got a sitting hen on now.
A lazy man seldo 1 complains be-|
cause he is unable to find work,
SNS SAY
Sie
—
y DODDS.
'
60c. a box or six boxes for $2.50
at all dealers, or The Ocdds Medi- }}
cine Company, Limited Toronto, J}
Canada, ~ )
w. N. U, 983
‘
|} ultimately ended in the Wonderful ¢
The «ge of the egg may be acou.date: |
ly decided by making a solucion of salt}
‘containing about eigit ounces to the
plat. When the sa {. dirgsolved,
N° Sam's Fault
Sam Snedeker, the commissary maa
and held in the community to be a
good churchman, annoyed the minister
extreme'y by getting up and walking
out of the church while th» sermon
was in progress. The preacher spoke
to Sam about it
It isn’t my fau-, doc, Sam protest-
ed, It’s a sort u¢ affliction I got.
The preacher told Sam he'd better
see the camp doctor, A few days lat-
er the preacher met the doctor.
Did Sam Snedeker come to you for
advice? asked the preacher.
Yes, said tho coctor, but I told Sam
I couldn’t do anything fo. him.
What was Sam's Affliction? |
Affliction! He <'dn’t say anything
aboit that. Sam said he'd been trou-
bling you by walking in' his sleep.
Spoiling good Paper
Poctry suould be written on one side |
of the paper, shoulan’t it? asked the
budding bard.
That depends on the poetry, replied
the editor wearily, Lots of it should
not be written on either side.
Never Suspected it Until Then
When did you find ‘hat you cared
for him? ,
Atout a quarter of a minute after
I discovered that he no longer felt that
life would not te worth living if he
couldn't have me. %
A season of Recuperation
So she hi. sent back all the presents
you gave her and refuses to see you
again? .
Yes. Gee, what . relief it is not
to be in love.
A Possible Explanation
I can't ‘derstand, said the librar-
fan, why it is that so few women come
here. We have a beautiful and com-
fort: °‘e reading-room, and I should
think the 1 dies would like to come in
not only to rcad, but to rest
Yes, veplied the trustee, but I no
tice that you have at -he entrance a
Lig placard, which says ‘No Talking.’
-
What {3 the finest form of Iving?
asked the eugenics professor.
Being in the ~ del business, gush:
ed the giggly girl.
pretty maid?
Where are you going, my
mutt, she
I'm going parading, you
said.
And what is tie axe
maid?
Why, to bus! the shop windows, of
course, she salir.
Then I won't delay you, my pretty
maid,
You'd better not try to, old boy, she
said.
for my pretty
They Were Long Enough
A Yankee, seeing a Irishman bring:
ing a prize cog to the show yard
thought he would «ave a joke at the t
Irishman’s exp ‘nse,
I say, Paddy, he began, do you ex-
pect that dog to win a prize? Loox
at his legs, man; they are far too short
for the size o% his body.
Pat—Sure, hit legs reach the
ground and that's il. he wants.
Missicn cf the Russian Fleet
A Russian flect under command of
Admiral Lesoffsky !ay in New York
harbor during the winter of 1863-4,
and anothey was in San Frenelsco har-
bor for the sai-e period. Thurlow
Weed is authority for the statement
that Farragut in his presence at din-
ner asked Lesoffsky why ue was idling
the winter away. The Russian ars-|
wered, I. am here under se ued orders,
to be broken only ,in a contingency
that has not yet occurred. In gener-|
al convergation he allowed it to ap-
pear that the particular contingency
was that a foreign power should at-
tack the United States. The same
authority records a confirmation of
this matter by Vrince Gortschakoff in
St. Petersburg, whe show 'd the Czar
Alexander's own ordey.
The family at the supper table had
been discussit.g a Lorse frightened by
an automobile into runuing away. Aft-
er silently listening for a while, little
Mary finaily looked up from ker plate.
I don’t blame horses, she said, for
being 'faid of automobil:s. You would
too, if you were a horse.
Why. Mary? asked her father.
Well, said Mary, woulint you be
seared if you saw a palr of pants com-
Jing along the road without a man in
them,
—————
No matter how deep-rooted the corn
or wart ma: be, it ‘aur’ yield to Hollo-
way's Corn Cure if used as directed.
Dirigible Balloons
The dirigible balloon is by no means/
a modern invention, as many peanle
seem to think. Ag a matter of fact,
as long ago as 1784 Genera! Meusnier
proposed ihe construction of an elong-
ated balloon which might be propelled |
through the air.. Experiments were
made with it by two *~others named}
Robert. who made s2vera! ascents and|
attal ed a speed of three miles an}
hour, though he method of propulsion |
was only serial cars work’d by hand. |
Nothing further wos attempted until
1852,
whea Henri Giffar’ built dirigi-!
s which, b) means of a light steam,
engine, he propelled at nearly seven]
‘tiles an hou., and since then various |
experiments have been made which |
ri}
|
umph of Zeppelin.
When towels tecoine dingy looking,
cover with cold water i: which are |
dissolved shavings ‘f pure white soap}
tind juice of ¢ lemon Place the ket-}
tle on the back of the stove and allow]
to come slowly to a doi! Rinse |
te water. then in bluewater. They
in the open .o. |
arop the egg gertly into the ve
| the egg is one day aia it wil. sink im-|
mediately; if it ‘s three days old it
sinks / st below the surface’ {ff five
days eld or older, it Toats.
THE REVIEW, CLARESHOLM, ALTA,’
AS A HEALER
"OF THE SKIN
If you could follow up the curves
made by Dr, Caase’s Ointment you
Would soon believe that tho day of mir-
acles had not gone by. The resulis
accomplished in a few hours are often
marvellous, and it {s only necessary
to employ a little patience in the tise
of this treatment in order to heal up
the most obstinate sores and ulcers.
The interral use of m-dicines for
the treatment of skin diseases is al-
Ways slow und unsatisfactory, but
when Dr. Chase’s Ointment fs applied
you can soon see for yourself the ben-
efits obtained as the’skin is gradualiy
healed and vestored to its natural con-
cition \
Put Dr, Chase’s Ointment to the
test in the treatment of eczema, salt
rheum, skin irritaticn and the healing
of sores and ulcors. You will be sur-
prised and ratified with the results.
Rellef is almost immediate, and cure
comes naturally with the continued use
of this great healing ointrient.
Telepathy
Telepathy fs an instance of a new:
fangled word fcr an old thing. Bacon
called it sympathy between two dis-
tant minds. Isaak Walton similarl7
explained Dr. Dunne’s vision in Paris
of his wife and ‘ead child, observing
that if two kites are strung to an ex:
act harmony and onc {s struck the oth- |
er sounds. Scottish highlanders, who
sould have been puzzled by the wane
telepathy, have long ago been familiar |
with the idea for which i. stands. An-;
drew Lang quoted the case of a poor}
highland woman who wrote to her son!
in Glasgow: Don’t be thinking too;
much of us, or I shall Le seeing you}
some evening in the byre. !
My father once had a curious tele-|
pathic experience, He wes dressing}
in his bedroom one morning when he!
sidenly saw the face of a Scotch ser-
vant girl, contorted with agony, in
the looking glass before him. He)
went downstairs to the kitchen and}
found the giri writhing tu a fit upon
the floor, he: face exactly as he had
seen it in the mirror.
Sympathetic Tommy |
Run upstairs, Tomm;, and bring ba-
by's nightgown, said Tommy's mother.
Don't want to, said Tommy. |
Oh, Tommy! If you are not kind to}
yur little sister she'll put on her)
wings and fly back to heaven.
Tommy's reply came,
Well, let Ler put on her wings and
fly upstairs for her nightgown!
European Nostalgia for ‘Nest Africa
There is a wor “2rful-charm about
West Africa, says Major Tremarne in
‘Some Austral-African Notes and An-
ecdotes,’ which few Europeans can
throw off. Then he telly of a man
who, after living for ten consecutive
years in a lonely part of southern Ni-
geria, made up his mind to have a
trip home and sailed away ia splendid
Went Too Far
spirits, Quizzer—What’s the matter, old
The Gold Cuast ports were part Of| man? You look worried,
West Africa, ani so he managed to! izzer—t have cause to. I engaged
make Limself fairly at home while’, man to trace my pedigree.
there, though th life on board ship Quiz.er—Well, what's the trouble
was already beginning to tore bim,|inen hasn't he ‘een successful?
and he wished that he had never left} Sizzer—Successful! I should say he
Nigeria. Sicvra Leone he did not}; 4, | -m paying him hush money.
like at all, as it was not the West Af-| ‘
rica which appealed to him, and he be-
gan to long f:. his home in the bush.
After leaving that port, with no sight
of land to cheer him he became despe-
rate, and cn arrival at Les ‘Palmas he|_ Mrs. Jones—So you got seats at
‘ arther. Blank’s theatre! How did you find
decla-ed: “I shall go no farther.I must 4
return st once. I have had quite en-| their new box office man?
ough of Europe Jones—He was so rude that he made
a Pt ACY ee eae me feel like a Chesterfield.
To Repair and Freehen Gloves In a‘! infantile complamts that are
A neat and durable method of mend-| the result of the depredatioas of worms
ing gloves is to buttonhole around the} in tie stomach and intestines Miller's
edges of the tear or hole in the glove; Worm Powders will be foun an effect:
before drawing the side. of the worn | ive remedy. They attack the cause
place together. The mending stitch-} of these troubles, ‘1d by expelling
es will not then be so likely to tear) the worms from the organs insure an
out, says the Philadelphia North Amer-| orderly working o: the system, without
ican. which the chila cannot maintain its
When cleaning wlite kid gloves, put} strength o: thrive. ahese powders
one ef the gloves upon the hand (the} mean health and improvement.
| a
Minard’s Liniment Cures Distemper.
Comparative Manners
other hand must be left free to do} 3
the work) and immerse in a basin of| A Good Gues
gasoline, Wet es small soft brush} ‘The class was discussing animals—
with the liquid nad rub po it a good) how tuey waiked, got up, etc. After
white soap. Scrub the glove gently} she explained the cow's method of ris-
with the soap and gasoline. rinse in| ing to her reet, the teacher asked,
clean gasoline and haus in the shade} Do you know any other animal that
dry. Fix the cther glove in the; gets up sike a cow? Silence reigned
samt manner. Be sure to keep away! for a moment then one little girl tim-
from fire or light. The rinsing g980-| idiy raised her hand.
The luckiest day for getting married
has not yet been discovered,
Whenever you feel a headache coming on take
NA-DRU-CO Headache Wafers
They stop headaches promptly and surely, Do not contais
epium, morphine, phenacetin, acetanilid or ether dangerous
drugs. 25c. a box at your Druggist’s. - 128
NATIONAL ORUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED,
EDDY’S
“2 in 1” and “3 in 1”
Washboards
SS
No other Washboards kave tne
zinc crimped by ‘ne method pecu-
llar to EDDY'S Washboards,
This patented process eliminates
the danger of torn linene—the |-
abuse of hands—the unpleasantness
of wash-day.
te wagers Al Aig and economy to
je greates egree. Insis'
EDDY'Ss. bieth cy
Just
as good as
Eddy’s
Matches
Can always make sure cf getting the highest prices (for
BARLEY and FLAX, by shipping their car lots to FOR L x
PORT ARTHUR and having them sold on commission 6" ed
THOMPSON, SONS AND COMPANY
THE WELL-KNOWN FARMERS’ AGENTS
ADD::ES8 700-7038 Y., GRAIN EXCHANGE, WINNIPEG
OA
WHBAT,
wit AM
Whether
For Yourself
orasa
Gift to your Friend
PERRIN’S
GLOVES
The well known Perrin trademark as
shown in cuts should be on every glove
you get, as this assures you perfection of
Style, Fit and Finish.
Best dealers the world over sell the
genuine PERRIN’S GLOVES.
6-11-12
—
A Qurer Call
The telephone air] in a certain hotel
answered a queer call over the house
exchange the other mornin, about 11
o'clock. When she ‘plugged in’ @
man’s voicc said ‘Hel'o! Is this the
So-and-Su hotel? No, replie¢ the girl
who was slightly surprisce, this is the
Such-and-Such hotel. Oh, all right!
said the man; just woke up and did
not know where I was.
A Common Quest
I say, my friend, cxlled the motor-
ist to the farmer, as he drew up along:|
side of the field. I’m looking for al
decent road to take me into Squiggles-
ville.
I'm derned glad to hear it, replied
the farmer. If ye iuappen to find it,
stranger, cend me a telegram, will ye?
In the Prohibitio: State
line may be returred to 2 separate What is it? asked the teacher. ‘ 9 -
bottle for future us in washing, but] A call, was the reply. sispping, AN el A sh Mera Good Size: Estate
ROtsH BASING A MO Ves cicele) SOMRY. BRN: | eS eae Sorry, mister, sa:d the mauager, but] The estate of Adolphus Busch, the
nN is, of course, thrown away. Gent- Have you ever otice: that the men ye come jest a mite .ew late. My wife well known beer magnet who died re
ly pull and stretch the gloves, after; whc are afraid they ina, earn mote} j. putting up son > brandi-d peaches| cently at St. Louis, is valued at $50,-
they are dry, before attempting to put} than they get Beer have unim- for them summer boarders, and we] 000,000, and is disposed of in the fot
ShqniiGne ea bangs: Borne a OREL used the last drop y -sterday, lowing bequests:
Tei The French doctor who clai:ns to Oneelgh: to the widows
Militant Oath somonteea known know that cannibalism is a sure cure Asked too Much ete OREN Busch ane
in England harare the suffragettes one for indigestion should at least expizin| Young man, said the fond father, in} Qne-eighth to each of five daughters.
of whom lies in Henrry VII's chapel— how he found it out. giving ;ou my Gcughter, © have in-} $50,090 to Altenheim, local home ior
Margaret, countess of Richmond, its apeeg ee eT, trusted you with the dearest treasure] aged,
builder's. mothe:, with her brass}, 2¢ there were not so many tawyers|of my life, $10,000 to his stenographer.
effigy by orrigianc She hated the| i= the lawnmaking bodies there might! The young man vas duly jmpresse..) $10,000 to wife's companion.
Turk, and We made, aanGamdentece be more laws that somebody besides) Then, curing the few moments of im: £10,000 to each of twelve charitable
ports, a sporting offer to the chivalrous lawyers could understand. pressive sile.ce that followed, he) institutions,
of ber ny On the condition that _—_ heard the patter of rain against the Beautiful hom- in Pasadena, Cal.,
indéa yanrtetendar ithe combine Considering ‘he prices caarged by | window pane. Cooperstown, N.Y., and St. Louls, ge
Pe ‘selves and march agains: the com-| S0™e of the New York hotels they! Gracious me! he exclaimed. It's) t. the widow.
Aerie vee Aa pune PAA Be ld a should not complain o2cause the|rainir> and 1 »aven’'t my umbrella./ All shares of stock in brewery go te
willl Riear end thes pee ka thelr guests carry off the sil erware. May I borrow yours to get to the sta-| his son, Auguct.
1 eh = rf rei, Cou Gtr te ores aaa einen tion? German. estate, jewels and house
BURGIGSS. 1 LHR CF Je Oat Now that the janitors and the Puli} Young man, sald the fond parent,! hold effects to widow.
toa of laund ESe? Ale 1c “thes sh man porters have formed unions, ona) I wouldn't trust anybody on earth with
would have been i'n easy one, for ty cannot talk so glibly of the decline cf| my umbrella. Tree All Right
ii ae Fe Ea one ae royalty. Baron Sans Dough—What do you
eeauiente was regained. i In orde. that policemen may take/ think of my family tree?
Rene net Le Sure Thirg shelter from rain and snow, Brussels} Mr. Muchgold—The tree may be a
= What are unicu rates, pa? municipality are erecting large zinc] good one, all right, but looks to me
An Irish Bull Wedding fees. my son, umbrellas around street lamp-posts. |as it the crop was a failure.
An Irisuman was trying to lead a ot
bull. He tied the rope to his wrist,| = =
and the bull took the lead. He took
it with a vengeance. As the Irish-| =»
man was flying around the corner a
friend shoute!: Wh:r> are you going}
Pat? I don’t know, he replied. Ask
th bull.
The =reeting of Democracy
The story that the kaiser loves most}
to tell his intimates, declares Mr. Wil-}
liam Armstrong in the Woman's Maga-|
zine, concerns the visit of his brother, |
Prince Henry of Prussia, to America. .|
The incident happ®med just ac the}
srince was landing at New York. Be-|
side him on deck stood Admiral von
Tirpitz. On the dock was a dense}
crowd. From its midst a stentorian
voice called, ‘Henry, Henry!’
The prince dic not uncerstand that
¢’ Was meant for him until the
admiral, smiling broadly, said: Your
roya' highness, { think some one wants
to speak to you. 7
The Prince Henry looked over to-
ward the h'tn.an megaphone, who still
continued to liwl out his name. See- ipl.
ing that he had caught the royal gaze, a
> owne the voice skouted: How's me At sigs A She ie a ae oa
Bit REE Sree Sa PRC Ge SATE? BE EEE TESTE eR
To clean suede shoes, first stuff the} Th ] b ildi ial th h ° d
shoes with soft paper: got a sancer| e only building mateni at has not increase
ful of spirits of turpentine; apply with ° ° e
a saturated clean rag: rub until tte} in price 1S
iz becomes quite bldck; then get the =
fresh and continue until tho shoes are Ee) :
clean, Pd p t] d
—— al aa Al NADA ortian
To keep milk toast from becoming oe
ret Bei ae Pane Dun rhe mo = It makes concrete that you can depend upon for satisfactory results, whether you use it for a silo
person may himself pour it on his é ora garden walk. é a 5
tous : High quality and low price are made-possible by efficient organization and manufacturing
aRan Ohteie me ee eee tea to. alae fs economies due to a large and growing demand.
lands last year, than in any year since = See that every bag of cement you buy bears the “ Canada label—-it ie your guaranties
the formation of the empire in 1871, of satisfaction,
the number leaving the fatherland te nia A
ing 18.545. Canada Cement Company Limited, Montreal
e Write for a free copy of the book ‘' What the Farmer Can Do With Concrete."
Shilohk|
i Pitts min el pistes re gut sa ee Le ees 4 he 5
eee, rah AE MS wiece 1870 SitCly! Pi, [epee die bas 2 ss 889 Fd Art adet [tke VY us
Ho)
THE FLIRTATION OF
ANNE.
_ She Knew He Was a
; Winner.
By RITA KELLEY.
000000000
The delayed invitation of Janet Fair's
Reuse party almost caused a rupture
@ the Halliwell faniily,'so intense was
the scramble to get frocks that match-
e@ the shoes, girdles to match the
frocks, with sufficient of everything
tsto the traveling bags and Anne off to
the station for the 4:50 train, At the last
minute she snatched from her writing
@esk « few pages torn from a maga-
¢ nnd stuffed. them into her hand
ns she burried down to the cab.
Zauct had sent her the story a fort-
might ago, and the success or failure
ef tiie week end for her depended upon
whether or not she waded through it
Before she reached Brentwood. . Janct
bed set opinions about some things,
among them her love for conventional
Anne and an overweening desire to
provide literature much diversified by
eemnientaries for her best beloved.
Anne made the train. As she bur-
wied down the platforfi: and climbed
@sto the car a feeling of wild good hu-
mor possessed her. The old cramping
@emureness that savored of self con-
@cfousness im her personality had been
best in the excitement of the last hour.
i®be found herself within the car with
@ dizzy desire to do something rash.
She didn't know what exactly. Then
@ flashed over her—no more old ladies
@F wowwen with children or nice elderly
imen. She shuddered at thought of the
fnumerable times she had asked to
‘@hare their seats—no. This time she
was free from tradition. She would
;pick a winner! With brave determina-
{@fon she gripped her bags and set out
‘Gown the aisle in quest of him.
He was at the extreme end of the
Big and brown, and he looked
part. The little query was said,
the alacrious moving of bags ended,
end Anne sank into the man's place by
the window, facing him, with a tiny
,fecling of exultation.
He was a winner sure enough, hand-
j@ome and with the most charming
;Manner imaginable. Anne dubbed him
@ Harvard man when be lifted bis hat,
They were all so delightfully gallant.
Bhe was not in the least embarrassed
jby his intermittent gaze, which was
timed, as only a winner knows how, to |
@eet her vagrant glances. She knew
her hat was immensurably becoming, |
with the pink rose and soft plume
@gainst her brownish hair; also that |
her blue fox set wns the lutest cry in
furs and her gloves and boots correct.
¥t occurred to her presently, however,
that she ought to convince the man of
her complete disinterestedness in chovs-
fng him for a traveling companton,
Accordingly she drew the portion of
Magazine from her hand bag and set-
tled herself comfortably. There were
gix pages of it, and she knew that, pro-
vided she read leisurely, it would last |
until she reached Brentwood, Janet bad
@ third virtue. She considered, specu-
lating subconsciously, with eyes fixed
on the flowing landscape, over a long |
Yook which she h:1 just interrupted, |
were his eyes brown or gray or green? ,
Ob, Janet's virtue! Well, it was pro-
viding literature for traveling young
ladies who were in danger of reverting
without warning to embarrassing orig: |
$nal self consciousness.
Janet bad scribbled in her bold chi-
Fograpby wherever an interlineation
was possible fond, foolish things
hich Anne soon forgot to read in her
prin in the story, She loved a
Borse, and this was a hero handled
with the sympathetic touch of a lover
of horses. Tears sprang to her eyes, to
be succeeded by a smile, a low laugh
or strained intentness and pain. She
finished the story as the train whistled
for Brentwood, with an overwhelming |
desire to lenn over and tell the man
facing her that it was the greatest
story ever wrilten; that she wanted to
tell him about it; that she knew he
would understand.
Carried outside herself, she leaned
forward impulsively, ber lips parted,
eyes glowing, about to speak. Presto!
Her mind sprang like a trap, and she
bent over her bags instead, embar- |
fassedly preparing to fice. She gave |
him the fleetest of glances as she rose,
and he looked steadily at her while a
suspicion of a smile, appreciative and
friendly, cnme into his eyes. She bad |
the story with her; but, suddenly fol- |
ng an impulse, she dropped it as a
thing of no value upon the seat.
Janet lair was In a state of woe. |
The lion of the bouse party had not
materialized. Frantic telephoning and
wires disclosed the fact that he had
Jeft town for Silox, next station beyond
Brentwrood, on the 4:50 train and had
been seen no more. The lair country
place stood midway between the two
stations used impartially by the Fair
guests, and a coupe had met both sta-
fions, one bringing Anne Halliwell
from Brentwood, the last woman guest, |
“He ts yours, dear,” said Janet, draw-
{ng Anne out {nto the chill moonlight |
on the little balcony.
“Why don't you take him yourse!f?”
Inughed Anne,
“Can't. Never sces me. Told mecon-
Adentially that he adored the svelte,
dreamy girl made of repose and inner
feserves, and—I handed him over to
you. You'll have to take him bodily,
for Gladys Whitcomb las sharpened
her teeth and nails ready to spring
i drag him off.”
eee
| She blurted out.
"But, Janet,” protested Anne, “1 neve
@ went in for a man in my life. 3
couldn't do it. I'd hate myself.”
“I'm a deep dyed villain!’ growled
Janet, striking an attitude. “You
blessed lamb, don’t 1 know your pro-
clivities? Rack your naive brain for a
simple and good reason why I sent you
a belated invitation, why I expected
Aubrey Churchill on the 4:50 train,
why"
“W-was"—
Anne started in consternation, lot, |
her balance against the low railing
and was reeling backward when strong
arms caught her and set her upon her
feet. Then a traveling bag was flung
upon the balcony, and, emerging from |
the shrubbery beneath, a man vaulted |
beside the girls.
“My lady of the story,” he said, smile
ing whimsically upon Anne, who after |
one swift look was trying vainly to
melt into the shadow, "I have a score
to settle with you after I get some-
thing to eat. Just look at this satu.
rated brow, will you? It's like a
sponge. And these aching arms car-
ried that bag ten miles on an empty ;
stomach,”
“Oh, jolly!” screamed Janet ecstatt-
cally, sliding through the French wine
dow. “You'll have a banquet, Aubrey
Churchill.”
A terrifying silence followed the H
click of the window bebind Janet's |
exit. Anne stood on the chilly balcony !
with the perfect stillness that precedes
either attack or precipitate flight, gaz-
ing straight into the steady eyes of |
the man before her. z
Then, turning swiftly, she wrestled
with the window fastening for an in-
stant and fled, The man, laughing
softly, stepped into the library and
called, ‘The tilt after the banquet, re-
meinber,” as she escaped the room. '
He was a young mun who would |
have his way, Anne discomfitedly ad-
mitted later. She had been playing
fox and geese witb him desperately all
evening, with the dawning conviction
that she was the singulur goose. When
he cornered ber in the dim library as
the other guests drifted into the musia
room she almost gasped surrender.
“Now, Miss Story Lady,” he said,
thrusting his hands into the pockets
of his tuxedo and looking tremendous-
jy handsome, with an expression of
mock severity on his clean cut face,
“whv did you do it?’
Anve squirmed preparatory to fight,
but he blocked egress from tbe divan,
ond sbe settled back, witb a laugh that
tried to be trifling.
“It was a grent story, wasn't it?” she
said irrelevantly.
“Don't you know,” be sald, dropping
down beside her, “that you ought to
apologize for causing me to discom-
mode our hostess.
Embarrassment enveloped Anne. She
was groping desperately for that will-
o’-the-wisp, her daredeviltry, that had
got her into this difficulty and refused
to extricate her. “\WW-why didn't you
geet off?” she stammered, a flush 1oan-
tling her checks. “1 did not keep you
there.”
“But the story did." He smiled in-
sistently upon ber as he drew the
pages from his pocket.
Anne's beart stopped. She had for-
gotten the scribblings on the inargins
when she dropped the story in the car,
+ “It seems we buve a stanch admirer
in Janet,” he said gently, “and I for
one, quite approve of her. I was deep |
in a panegyric on your charms and |
virtues when the train went through |
Silox.” |
Anne groaned. She could not help ft, |
knowing, us she did, the extravagance |
of Janet on paper.
“She bas everything arranged,” he
continued, smiling subtly down at the
helpless girl balf facing him. “Brides-
maids—think of it—br'desinaids! We
didn't either of us know that when we
started out this afternoon, did we?”
Anne suddenly buried her face in her
hands. He looked at her a moment
musingly, then ever so gently extri- |
cated her fingers and made her look at |" 4,
Lim,
-“Janet Is a clever girl,’ he drawled.
“She said you would bave to be taken
with a trick.” -
Anne Dlinked. Where was her
vaunted demureness? “No such thing,”
“I did it myself. &
kuew you were a winuer.”
0000000000000 000080880888
PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Coughs and Colds.
In the season when coughs
and colds are prevalent any
method of preventing them and
checking the frst symptoms
without drugs may be of in-
estimable value. Therefore the
following suggestions are offer-
ed in anticipation: When you
find you have a cough and be-
fore it gets to be deep seated
go into the alr and practice
deep breatbing. Draw air into
the lungs until they are com-
pletely distended, vaising the
arms above the head during in-
spiration to more fully expand
the chest. Told the air in the
lungs for a few seconds; then
breathe it out slowly. Repeat
the operation a dozen times or
more and after an hour try it
again. Persistence in this treat-
ment will often cure a newly
contracted cough in a few bours.
If the congh is of long standing,
pain may be felt under the
shoulder blades and across the
chest during the breathing, but
as this is caused by the tearing
away of adhesions of the lung
tissue it will usually pass away
{n a day or two, and the fact
that It ts felt shows that the
lungs need thorough Inflation.
|
THE REVIEW. CLARESHOLM, ALTA.
CHAOS IN BOUNDARIES.
Frontiers in South America Are an
Uncertain Quantity.
The frontiers of Bolivia, like those of |
most South American countries, are
very uncertain, and a map of South
America made in Bolivia includes a
vast portion of the level lands east of
the Andes called the Chaco, A map of
South America made by the Argentine |
Republic shows Bolivia as an entirely
different country, with no Chaco with-
in its boundary. Then a map of South
America nade in Peru includes a vast |
hinterland in Amazonia, while ono
made in Brazil shows the Brazilian
frontier away over In the territory
marked Peru on the Peruvian map,
while the map makers of Ecuador and
| Colombia show an entirely’ different
disposition of the lands at the head-
waters of the Amazon from that de-
scribed by tlie Brazilian and Peruvian
map makers, :
There is, however, a commission
composed of Brazilians and Peruvians ,
who are at the headwaters of the Ama-
zon delimiting the frontiers of Peru
and Brazil and incidentally rectifying
the claims of Ecuador and Colombia.
Meanwhile Bolivian soldiers are fight-
ing Argentine soldiers on the Chaco,
and so the question stands. In 1902
King Edward VII. delimited the fron-
tiers of Chile and Argentina, but the
Chileans thought he gave the Argen-
tines too much, so they allow the ad-
venturers and bad men of Chile to go
| into this disputed territory, and they.
Swoop down from the hills and cap-
ture the cattle upon the Argentine
plains just as the highlanders used to
do in Scotland. — Peter MacQueen in |
Natioual Magazine.
FOOD AND FUEL ARMIES.
What the Increasing Population of the
| World May Force.
'| According to Professor H. N. Dick-
Bon of the University college, Edin- |
burgh, the world is beginning to feel ,
the pinch of fuel and food. The pro-
fessor tuld the scientists gathered at
Birmingham to attend the annual
meeting of the British Association For
the Advancement of Science that the |
human race was in the position of a
family which had occupied the same
farm for centuries and had so increas-
ed in numbers as to outgrow the pro-
ductiveness of the place, making a re-
movil to other Jand necessary. Only
ip the case of the buman family there
is no means of migrating to anotber
plinet. rit
Wheat acreage, this learned geogra-
pher tells us, is not keeping pace with
the increase of population, and “the
crisis will be upon uns before the end
of the century.” Ihe supply of coal
will last less than three centiitigs. The |
only course open to us, be says, is a
stocl taking ofour resources and a re-
distribution of population, with an em-
phasis on the raising of food.
While Professor Dickson does not
eny so, his Idea scems to be that as a |’
nition tells off so many men to serve
‘in Its army of defense, so the world of
the future will Lave to tell off so many
men to serve as fvod raisers. Even-
tually we shall find that country plan- |
ning will become as important as town ,
plunning—which seems to be reason-
able enough.—Exchange.
Radium and Mesothorium.
A short time ago we were told au-
thoritatively that radium bas no value
in the treatment of cancer, Now we
learn that the German authorities are
buying the whole available supply for
this very purpose, and German med-
ical practice is of the severely conserva-
tive kind. Over a million dollars has
been voted by various German municl- |
palities for the purchase of radium, |
and this is about the value of the
whole existing supply.
there is another product similar to ra-
dium and with the same medical val-
It is called mesothorium, and its
price Is only $50,000 per gram. It is
| sald that the Austrian government has
, practical monopoly of both radium
aud mesothorium,
Best Tea In the World.
The best tea in all China and there-
| fore in all the world grows on top of a
6iuall mountain in western Szechuan,
called Ming Shan, and Is cultivated by
the priests of the Buddhist temple on
its summit. Tradition says that a Chi-
nese pilgrim brought the seeds from
India centuries ago, There are only a
few pounds in each crop, and these
have always gone as tribute to Peking
; for the use of the imperial household.
Who will get the precious tea how?
Will it be reserved for the family of
the president of the republic or will it ,
scattered among those who are |
willing to pay a big price for suc. 9 |
be
Juxury ?—Youth’s Companion,
“Yuuzhyual” Looks Funny.
The English Spelling Reform nssocia-
tion has no use for the system sug-
gested by Mr. Carnegie, but advocates
a system based upon the doubling or
combining of letters. Sir
Ramsay told
eystem could learn to spell in five min-
utes, though he admitted that some of
the words looked strange when spelled
fn the new way. “Usual,” for instance,
would be spelled “yuuzbyual.” — New |
York World,
Overcrowding In Berlin.
Statistics published show the appall- |
{ng scarcity of lodgings for the poor in
Terlin, One house in the Ackerstrasse,
\fn Nori@ Berlin, shelters over 3,000
people. The papers nre warning peo
ple in the provfaces against coming to
look for work ip Berlln—Londop Ez '
oress,
It seems that |
William |
he British association re- |
cently that any one who looked at the |
TWO DIFFERENT THINGS.
How Gossip Distorts a Little
Question of Fact.
t
Bhowing
any particular two girls, but any two
girls met on the street—kissed, made
faces nd started to chatter; And the
first girl said:
“I want to congratulate you, dear.”
And the second replied;
“Thank you. But what for?”
| “I hear you are going to marry Dick
Henrooster.”
“Who ever told you such a ridiculous
, thing as that?”
“Why, your best friend, Daisy Stur- |
| tium.”
“Listen, dearie.
honesty, but I can't belleve that Dalsy
ever said any such thing. She knows |
everything about me, and we have |
never had a quarrel, and she isn't a
‘cat. Be fair, I'll leave it to you. Did
| she ever tell you that I was going to
marry Dick?"
“She did.”
| “Would you mind repeating her very
| words?” :
“She told me distinctly, ‘Grace Pan-
sibed is engaged to Dick Henrooster.’ "
| “Aha!
and Daisy told the truth, But what
right have you to gather from that
fact that Iam going to marry the litle
fool? Gossip, that’s what It {!s—just
mean gossip. Can't a girl get engaged
to a fellow without having a bunch of
busybodies running about telling that |
she Js going to marry him?
“We girls have a rough row to hoe.”
—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Suspicions Confirmed.
| WLittle Laura was so quict out in the
kitchen that her mother suspected the
child of some mischief.
“What are you doing, dearic?” the
mother called.
“Nuffin,” Laura answered.
“But you must be doing something.”
“No, I ain't.”
“Are you sure?”
“Well, I isn’t doin’ much.”
“Tell mo this instaut what you are
doing or mamma will have to come
with the bairbrusb.”
After a moment's silence the little
one replied:
“I'm just dwivin' hairpins Into the
soap wif Marjorie’s looking glass:’—
Youngstown Telegram.
Simple Enough.
“Here's an odd news note. A new
Jersey trust company saved $75,000
lust year by aboUshing its legal de-
partment.”
“That is odd. I wonder how It came
to decide to do It.”.
“Simple enough. It decided to obey
the law."—St. Louis Republic.
|
| A Genius.
; “All the master minds are not at
the head ‘of great industria! enter. |
! prises.”
t SNO
i “Ive just been reading about a man
who led a double life on a salary of
$12 a week.”—Birmingham Age-Her- |
ald.
: Why She Sang.
Ministerial Friend (on a visit)—I
| wonder what makes your mamma 80
| happy today? She is singing all over
the house.
tums home.—Harper’s Magazine.
He Expected Too Much.
sett last year.
But, of course, one cannot remember
all the young men who rescue one.—
Life.
| =
| Happy Man.
“What are you thinking of that
pleases you so, Henry?” é
| “I just happened to remember that
it is fully ten years since I've heard |
anybody recite ‘The Charge of the
Light Brigade.’"—St. Vaul Ploneer
Press,
Studying For it.
hy page.
to be a humorist?
Mr. X (proudly)—-I'm sure of it!
hind me and pecked me on the head
with a hatchet!—Pittsburgh Press.
Idle.
| tonight.
Seeond Freak—Does !t?
First Freak —Yes,
Puck,
Over Nothing.
The two girls—and these were not |
I don’t doubt your |
That's how these rtorles get ,
‘ ptarted. I see, I am engnged to him, |
Little Mary—I dess she’s thought of ,
somefin' to scold pzpa about when he |
He—Don't you remember me? I res: |
cued you from drowning at Narragan- |
She (sweetly)—How stupid of me! ,
Mrs. X—Baby is so fond of the fun: |
Do you think he is destined |
Why, only yesterday he sneaked up be- |
First Freak~—My engagement euus
Next week I'll be
what you might call an {dle curlosity.~ |
"YOUR PLACE IN THE WORLD.
Be
.
Well, For, Though It May
Small, it le important.
It is the privilege of a limited num-
ber of mortals to stand in the limelight
and be-applauded, to bave a pathway
cleared for thelr progress and an at-
| tentive audience for thelr highest ac-
| cent of command or exhortation. Most
| of us Oil humble places. We are not
heard of at our birth, nor when we die.
Wo make one more in the crowded
| thoroughfare. The “hungry generations
tread us down.” Life’s swollen current
roars and eddies about the little canoe
we are trying to paddle through the
| rapids and stream. “What fs the use?”
we ask. And of what use are we?
What difference would it make if we
gave up the fight? Who would notice
our vanishing, and what is one life
among so many?
In that mood of discouragement it Is
to be remembered that each of us has
Ids place which he alone cin till.
There are others, no doubt, who can
do the same kind of work, but they
cannot do our work. History is full of
tragedies due to the failure not alone
of emperors, but of peasants—uot
merely of commanding generals, but of
Fill it
|
'
of a great cause has been due to the
fact that one inconspicuous man in a
small place has thought it made no
difference if be ran away. — Vhiladel-
phia Ledger.
NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE.
They Display It In an Acute Form In
* Tomsk, Siberia,
In “Through Siberia—An Empire In
tho Making,” by R. L. Wright and
Bassett Digby, the authors tell us that
the city of Tomsk has two morning
dailies. Any important news that
comes over the wires during the day is
struck off on handbills, which are sold
In the streets as “telegramma.” At
' the time of the Russo-Chinese crisis
there came carly one morning the star-
tling report that the Russian minister
at Peking had been assassinated,
“One of the papers at once rushed a
handbill through the press, but before
it was distributed came the official de-
nials from St. Petersburg and Peking.
‘Jn keeping with the best Journalistic
traditions of the occident, the editor
| bad the denials printed on a second
| bandbill.
“Then he called all the newsboys
privates in the ranks—and the collapse |
CR Lhbh Att tlh ht phd d
$ PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
The Eyes In Sickness.
The eye has a habit of regis-
tering the health, Thus a lack
of luster, heavy lidded expres-
sion is generally the result of
excessive fatigue or ill health;
a dilated pupil usually means
fever; . yellowish tint to the
white of the eye bespeaks Dil-
jousness, while an extreme blu-
ishness of the white is often an
indication of impure blood or a
scrofulous tendency.
There 1s no greater mistake
than to try brighten dull
eyes with drugs or drops. Eye
sight is too important to be
tampered with, and even the
common practice of putting a
drop or two of cologne In the
eyes to make them brilliant is
injurious.
A MASTERPIECE IN MARBLE.
Wonderful Table Made by an Obscure
French Sculptor.
There recently died at Ivry, 2 Pans
suburb, a remarkable old man, & sep-
tuagenarian, named Fraissard. He
died tn poverty, but bad he chosen he
could have become one of the most
famous European sculptors. As It
was, he finished Ilfe as he began it—
more or less penniless, When a boy
he was apprenticed to a marble cutter,
.and he at once discovered his powers
in this direction. For fifty years he
had continued to execyte the most
beautiful works of art, mostly in mo-
bales.
M. Fraissard's masterplece took him
nearly twenty-four years to perfect.
It is a black marble table. In the
middle is a chessbonrd, on elther side
of which are playing cards arranged
nas fans. On the table are dominos
and dice, cigars and cigarettes, and
several coins In gold and silver, All
these are of course inlaid. The ma-
terials in thé table, besides the black
marble, are agate, onyx, porphyry,
malachite and lJapus lazuli, the tones
of which are biack, red, orange, blue
and white. Ninety different kinds of
marble were also used.—London Stand-
SSOHOHCHOSHOSHSHSSS SOHHSSOSSHSSSSOHSSSEESESS
VOCHSHSSSSHSSSOSSHSSSSHSSSSSSSS SHSHSSESEEOSE
, ard.
/4nto the Inner office, explained the sit- |
uation with the utmost candor, banded
| out supplies of cach bill to the enger
| Iads and told them to run the streets
crying ‘Horrible Assassination’ until '
| the ‘Horrible Assassinations’ had sold
out. Then, after resting up for ten
! minntes, they were to open a chorus of
| ‘Startling Sequel’ and proceed to sell
ont all their ‘Startling Sequels.’ And
they did.”
Knew What to Do.
Spenking of rare presence of mind re-
cently recalled to ex-President Taft
the case of a handsome young woman
of his acquaintance. She had gone to
the railway station to mect a man
friend of the family, and when he de-
barked from the train the young man |
Jost his bead and impulsively kissed
her. The girl thought it the part of
| prudence to tell her mother of the af-
fair, upon which the latter was simply
horrified.
“You don't mean to tell me that he
| bad the impudence to kiss you?” she
| cried. “And to think of the crowd at
| the station! Why, my dear, what did
| you do in such an embarrassing situa-
tion?”
“Why,
mother, I just kissed him
young woman, “I wanted to give all
those people the impression that wo
! were relatives."—New York Tribune,
Best Fow! For the Table.
The best table fowl !s one that has
the heaviest welght of meat on those
parts of the body which are favorite
cuts. The breast and thighs must be
heavy in a good table fowl In propor-
tion to the remainder of the body. In
order to have thick breast meat and
big thighs these muscles must be used
by the fowl. In other words, the flier
and scratcher will prove to be the best
table fowl, for their lively habits give
the muscles of the Jegs and breast
work that renders them firm and fine
Instead of leaving them flabby and full
of loose tissue in the shape of fat—
Home and Farm,
He Knew How He Got It.
“That large lump running across the if
back of your head,” said the phrenol-
ogist, ‘means that you are inclined to
be curlous, even to the polnt of reck-
Jessness."
“I know it," safd the man who was
cousulting him. “I got that bump by
| eticking my bead into the dumb walter
| shaft to sce % the waiter was golng
up, and !t was coming down.”
Quite Natural,
“Judge,” said the forewoman of the
jury of ladles, “wo want to speak to
yon about that sealed verdict we just
rendered.”
«Well, Indies?”
“Can wo unseal it and add a post-
script?’=Washington Herald,
| Why Read Aleud?
} .A modern morallst rogrets that no
body nowadays reads aloud.
Bot fs that the main regret?
| Isn't tho Inck of Ilateners inuch more
| serlous?—Clevelaud Plain Denler.
|
| Something on the Anelents,
“My wife and myself quarreled py
wireless today.”
“That's what I call having a few
words over uothing.""—Louisville Cou»
fer-Journal
“An oyster of the pnleozote period
would have mado a meni for twelve
people". They didn't swallow them
‘ whole im those days.—Toledu Blade.
INDIAN ATHLETES.
From the Race Standpoint They Are
In a Class by Themselves.
Ask any expert to call the roll of
American atbletes and he immediately
begins to include Indians in his list.
‘be names of Bender and Sockalexis
come to mind at once, and besides
these there are Chief Meyers—whose
! real name is Tortes—Cayou, Hudson,
the incomparable Thorpe and a dozen
| others.
back, of course,” coolly replied the ,
The noble red man takes up room
enough in athletic annals to furnish
pride for a nation of many millions of
people, yet the total number of Indians
in the United States is only a little
over 300,000,
That Is the most.astonisbing part of
the record. If the city of Washington
should produce such a group of ath-
letes as the Indians have done experts
' and scientists from all over the earth
| would come to the federal capital to
learn the secret of its success. The
entire Indian population of this coun
try is less than that of Washington.
Considering the meagerness of Its
* numbers, probably no other race in the
world can compare in athletic prowess
with American Indians.—Chicago Jous-
nal,
| Plenty of Fur Animals.
{| “Do not believe all you read about
‘the extinction of fur animals,'" writes
n statistician to a Paris paper. “With
the exception of a few—seal, chinchilla
and American lynx—‘fur animals’ are
no less numerous than they were thir-
ty years ago, when the prepared pelts,
now popular for outer garments, were
used for lining purposes. The high
prices are caused by the increased de-
mand. The fur bearing animals will
not be exterminated because the fash-
ions change. While one animal, tem-
porarily popular, is being hunted the
other has time to recuperate. Nature
helps also in this way: The overhunted
animal instinctively abandons its bab-
itat, often seeking refuge where the
| hunter cannot follow.”
; A Great Medical Triumph.
Che report that Dr. Noguchi of the
| Rockefeller Institute Mor Medical Re-
search bas at last discovered the germ
of rables is of worldwide interest. It
marks one more triumph of the re-
markable Institution founded by the
| generosity of a great American ‘cap-
| taln of Industry. Professor Metchul-
koff calls the discovery another mile-
stone of bacterlological history. If the
Japanese pathologist has solved the
| problem that has long baMed scientists
his name will live In history, The bor-,
tible sufferings of the victims of rabies
make this one of the most drendfui of
all diseases,—Lesile's.
Skipper Wringe’e Career.
Captain Robert Wringe, who seems
Nkely to comipand Sir Thomas Lip-
ton's challenger, Shamrock IV,, whea
sho races for tho American's cup a year
hence, gained frst Land knowledge of
tho American const conditions whea
he was skipper of the Minelon for Au-
gust Belmont tn 1900, Ho also added
to his knowledge of the Atlantic const
| currenta, tides aud winds as skipper
| ef the challenge sloop Shamrock IL
when he gniled that craft for Bir
Thomas Lipton in the International’
races {2 1903, He was in an advlaorg,
eapacity aboard the Shamrock
g
ewe oe
0, 2,
oeoee
oo, 2,
eas
0,
?e
SE
o,
e,
Poteet ee,
%
Sas
},
°
eo,
°
O,
0-48e-e80-08o-0)
e
Picture Framing and
all kinds Repair Work
e,
Lrteeretes
e
Japanese Matting Squares from 60c. to $10.00.
For 2 weeks only 15 per cent off any of the above,
Tapestry Squares from $9.00 to $ . For 2 weeks only 25 per cent off the Tapestry haley
R. S. Brereton
Complete House Furnisher, Agent Mason & Risch Pianos and Victor Gramophones and Records
°
WALL PAPER —
REMNANTS-}-Take your choice at 5 cents a Double Roll.
My 1914 stock before buying elsewhere.
="best selection in Alberta.
CARPETS
21.50.
The Claresholm Review
An Independent Weekly Newspaper
L. G. Shortreed. Publisher.
Subscription Rates
One year, in Canada : $1.50
One year, to United States + 2.00
Single Copy — - Bie ies de.
Thursday, Mar. 5th 1914 |
Would this Not:
bea good time to bring your watch |
in for repairs.
Probably it has been running for;
years without attention,
|
Leave it with me the first time you |
ive in town, it will pay you well in
the end,
If My Work
has pleased you in the past
“PELL YOUR FRIENDS”
If it Hasn’t,
“PELL ‘THEM THAT TOO
I take the Chances.!
G&G M. GOonLey
a | Claresholm,
~sevgneoe ey a ea |
|
WILL BUY
LARGO W UIPRK HOUSE -NEAR
til MK ASSOCTATION'S
GROUNDS,
For Vexms—Write H. L. Wass
‘ Alta.. or the Review
i lin, Alta
Yanted
ar f
its Wante
| ( sholm and districts to sell
CANADNS GREA PEST
NURSERIES”
Hardly it trees, Simaltl Pruite,
Hl » Seo dt Potatoes, Seedlings
rooted uttings for windbreaks,
hits, Evergreens, Bulbs ete.
[ eand recommended by
WESTERN EXPERIMEN PAL
STATIONS
Highest commissions paid
ek nee at ee i ihe Send for | [
Stone & Wellington
Toronto, Ont.
(continued: from page one)
petition willbe allowed to retain the
i Allanimals entered
ithey belong.
jin a class known as 3 vear old,
ac wreet record of
furnished for the purpose.
jished he the purpose:
the amount and
and
Pose Mestostes% Po to-toe’ Mr Metetestee®
So-efo-efeeSeco-eteefockectoelocte-slosecloeloetecteecesie4, AG oSe-adocte ioede-esocte-slocteeSosteelosteetodloeleds,
‘Open to Pure Breed
Herds of Dairy cows In
the Province of Alberta
1, he competition shall be open to
the owner of any pure bred herd of
dairy cows in the province of Alberta,
conducted substantially according to |
the rules of “Tne Canadian Record
of Performance for Pure Bred Dairy |
Cattle,” provided, however, that the!
test period need notin this case be
confined to one period of lactation, |
but may extend over into the follow-
ing period of lactation within twelve
| consecutive months, and also that the
rules’ governing the freshening of
cows be not considered in this test.
2. All cows in the herd must be en-
tered, but the final award shall be |
made on the average milk and butter
fat production of the highest yield-
ot the cows in each |
|
herd, provided ten cows or over are |
ing 50 per cent
entered in the contest.
3. In herd of less than ten cows, the
highest five cows shail be taken
ht. A herd must consist of a mini-
piu of tive cows,
15. Phe competition shall commence
; April Ist,
Old, March 81st,
anc close
Ith,
6. The Department of Agriculture
Will arrange for the supervision of
ithe cows entered in the competition.
7. Incase of dispute, the Depart |
tnent’s ruling shall be final.
8. In calculating the relative stand-
different ages, the
rules governing the Canadian
Record of Performance shall be used.
for the test
registered in the
to which
ing of animals of
mist previously be
Herd Book for the breed
10, Cows from 2 to 8 years old shall
bein a class known as 2 years old.
Cows from 3 to # vears old shall be
old shall be
ina class known as ¢ years old,
shall be
Cows from + to 5 vears
Cows 5 vears old and over
inaelass known as Matures,
I. All
ceived before
applications must be re-
the Ist April, stat-
and registered num
of
ing breed, ave,
ber for each cow
12. The owner of a cow entered in
the test shall weigh, or enuse to be
Weighed, each milking, and keep a
the same on forms
the
furn-
At the end of each month
shall forms
13.
wer report on
(a) record of the weights of each |
Penis with the total yield of milk |
from each cow for the month,
Au approximate statement of
kinds of feed given,
stabling and
date
concerning
scales as his own, care of the animals,
16. The prizes will be awarded ae-! Eh A copy of the monthly reports
cording to the following scales of must be mailed within ten days after
points: the close of each calender mouth.
25 points for each pound of butter 15, As soon as the cow's test is
fat, 8 points for each pound solids completed a statement compiled
not fat. (Solids not fat to be ealen} from the monthly reports of the
ated by approved formmuise.) year’s milk record shall be forwarded,
17. No eo t shail iw } (le same ta yo hoouw sworn to be
more than epee, fore a Notary Publie or Justice o
Ineach case the winner of a prize; the Peace
will be Vent choier of an Antti 1h, The owner of cows entered i
from one of the following breeds : this competition shall provide board
Holstein, Jersey Aveshire and | and lodging for fhe inspeetor daring
Glinrehot u his ollicial visits, and shall conveys
Ist prize Yearling, j him, When leaving, to the railway
Yad prize Calf over eight months, | station, or to the next farm to be vis
Bea prixe Calf over four montles, | ited, free ote a ze
4th prize Calf under four months. 117. ‘the prizes will be awarded ac
hth prize pair pigs over four inonths, | cording to the following seale of
6th Pair pigs under foud months, | points: ;
7th Pen poultry, six breeds, Yo points for each pound ot butte:
Sth Pen poultry, for ds
{th Pare bred pig over four months
ir bre
Wth Pare bred pig under four
mouths.
A prize of a heifer calf will be
given to the girl standing highest in
the competition, provided she does
not win one of the four prizes, |
fat 3 points for each pound Solids |
thot fat
(Solids not fat to Se calculated by
approvect formulae.)
Ist prize Silverware, value $200.00,
Znd prize Silverwear, value SL00,00,
rd Silverwear value 350,00
Prtertetoateatoateatectectocter’ sregoateagosteetecteateetestreteateetodty 0-484)
Hardwearing Jute Squares from $4.75 to $10.00
;clear sheet of all
Friday
p.m, in the Parish Hall,
| Medicine Hat.
| discovered,
; You will tind it
tHE REVIEW.
O @
aa al
2
?
o-fo-Selocto-e!
OO
I have the largest and
0,
e
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The. Creamery
The second season for the Clares-
holm Creamery has just finished and
a financial statement has been drawn
and audited and although the cream
ery isstill behind somewhere in the
neighborhood of four hundred and
fifty dollars it picked up this last
season four huadred dollars on the
first seasons debt. The first year
this concern did all its own terning
and hauling cream and natura!ly ex-
penses were very high. The co ning!
year is expected to more than mike a
debts and will ina
short tiine be a large paying busi- |
All interested in the ere inery |
oul
ness.
are invited to attend the meet
afternoon Mareh 13th at 2.50
Froo. to Any Who Will Avply
At the ae panitecel farm Leth
bridve a three pound sample of -heice
potatoes for seed is given awe te
of charge sto any farmer who tiuses
the trouble to write and ask for then
This seed is of the very best jets
awndois furnished by the Do utnion
Government. Write and get -ome
thing for nothing.
Hewes
‘Here Is Your Opportualy |
|
|
To purchase a new gasoline ti itor |
35 H.P, still in company’s war hous:
aud guaranteed the
Also a six furrow engine gang
shutt, The above will be sold it your,
own price aud terms, as the o vnetis
by co nowy. |
yah
OKs |
going east. Por full particule. ide
dress A. W. Pratt 6300 Main street
HEAT AND COLD.
What We Don’t Know About Tempera-
ture Would Fill a Big Book,
The highest boners of the scientifie
world await exploration in) the un
known elds of temperature, Strange
us it may seem, We really know very
little about temperature, Between the
tempernture of the surface of the sun,
estimated at 6.000 degrees C., and ab:
solute Zero, estimated at minus 273
degrees C.. very little has ever been
The tleld of research bas
heen practieally restricted to 725 de.
grees or between the temperature of
quid air (minus 200 degrees: nud the
Hirst visible red of heated tron (plus
425 degrees), We Know that at a tem
perature of 1,000 degrees C. twenty:
vine metals become liquid, at 1,008
degrees gold fuses, tungsten melts at
3.000 degrees, the temperature of the
electric are is 8,720 degrees, and here
begins the great unkoown ip the world
of heat.
The hottest thing on earth Is the
electric furnace, with a temperature of
nearly 3,780 degrees, In this intense
heat even the diamond can be melted
aud boiled like water. But this is bare
ly halfway to the temperature of the
surfice of the sun, and it is thonght
that research in these higher tempern
tures will ultimately result in the
greatest discoveries of the age
What these discoveries mnmuy be no
one can foresee, any more than any
one could have foretold the results of
the discovery of radium. — New York
World.
Which Foot Walks Faster?
If vou will take a pavement that ts
clear, so that there will be no inter
ference, and walk briskly in the cen:
ter, you will find that before you have
yone fifty yards you have veered very
much to one side, You must not make
any effort, of course, to keep in the
center, but if you will think of same:
thing and endeavor to walk naturally
yer enninot Keep a direct Hae. The ex
phination @f this ties in the propensity
efoone foot te wolk faster than the
ther, oroone les tokes a longer stride
than the other posi one toa walk
tocane side You .ern trv aio experi
lonenft in this way by plireing nwo sticks
hhout efebt feet apart then stand aft
nbheut sixty feet. blindfold voursell
sod endenvor te walk between them
Atinost inpossible.
| rent
| ;
jand city
\ year
‘of Canada
| thelr country must deplore.
{other in any
| sheep than a
| by the
CLARESH(%M, ALBERTA.
FUTURE ASSURED
; Many Industrial Advertisements in One
Western City Are Good Indication |
The Edmonton Bulletin now printe|
a “made-tn-Edmonton” page of ad |
vertisements, Amongst the twenty. |
three industrial enterprises which use
this medium of publicity are three
metal works companies, a foundry and
machine company, an auto top com-
pany, two furniture companies, a glass
works, @ concrete company, a sau:
sage concern, a manufacturing Jewel: |
ler, @ chemical company, a shoe manu: |
facturer, an electro-plating plant, a
lumber firm, a dairy company, a rub-|
ber plaut company, a leather company,
a terft maker, a box company and two
inotor boat companies.
On this page appears an article by
theEdmonton Industrial Commissioner |
@| calling attention to the fact that
Western Canada is rapidly becoming
cne of the greatest markets in the world
for manufactured goods. The country
is filling up rapidly with prosperous
people who demand the best wares
and are willing to pay for them. |
Wastern Caaadian, American and Brit- |
ish manufacturers are establishing |
branch factories on the ground, and |
amongst the raw materials ready to |
thelr hand in the Edmonton district
are salt, limestone, silicate shales, |
clay for brick and pottery purposas, |
sypsum, sandstone, glass sand, gold,
«oal, petroleum, and timber on navig: |
able waters convenient to the city.
The commissioner declares that the |
Western Curadian industrial field
bucked by a vapid agricultural growth
arvauts belief in the speedy develop-
ot onton into a great city,
and tm the rise of many other {ndus-
communities of much importance,
true spirlt of the great
the prosperity of farm —
Radu
is the
West where
must ever go hand in hand
tnder the Canadian National Policy
tf reascnab! tarity protection and
re fatth in
s vive ally temporary money strain
rinduced by world-wide monetary
conditions,
APPEAL TO FARM
ERS
Toronto Glehe Points Out Great Open:
ing for Them in “Canadi an ‘Market
Under the herding “A Challenge to
the Farmers,” the Toronto Globe
says editorially:
“New, Zeal.ud now supplies butter | |
fo the Cansdian market. According
he Canadian Trade
w Gealand, T2068)
shipped to Van-
ind during the fiscal
“storage companies
in Canada, it is
Commissioner in N
boxes of buiter wer
couver from A
1012-13.
from several pol
seid, are endeavoring to get in touch
with New Zealand shippers, so tie
j{mperts of chis commodity will go on
{nereasing until Canadian farmers in|
the West wake up to the possibilities
of the home market, With a rapidiy-
increasing population and constantly-
industries, it seems extra-
ordinary that, in a land so richly en-
by with the means of
supplying foce to the consumer, Can
adians shouid have to go so far afield
as New Zealand for dairy products
Canada should be able to supply all
the butter and other produce required
were the soil put to its natural use
and the principle of mixed farming’
more generally adopted, Ontario alone
{s capable of supplying all the wants
in this departnrent were
farming conducted on strict business
principles, net only in regard to pro
duction, but also to marketing. Mixed
farming, co-operation, and, improved
transport facilities would go a long
way to hole the Canudlan market for
the farmer. . .. . . The mining
of the prairie lands by wheat-growers
to the practical exclusion of mixed
farming, and the importation of food-
stuffs into a country so rich in soil
and climate, are unhealthy symptoms
which all concerned in the welfare of
The agri.
cultural and manufacturing industries
are complementary the one to the
well-balanced scheme of
national economy, and each has its
place to fill in supplying the needs of
the people and in contNbuting to thelr)
moral and material welfare”
extending
dowed nature
Cattle, Sheep, Hogs
It is as a feeding rather than a
| selling crop that alfalfa will have Its
greatest importance to the Lethbridge,
district, \ |
The increase in beef cattle this!
year is notable. One man alone is
bringing in 8,000 head of young steers:
from Mexico. Hogs, too, are to be
found tn growing number, while there!
are nearly twenty-five per cent, more
year ago. Last year,
way, the district considered
tributary to Lethbridge yielded over
600,000 pounds of wool, and this year,
the total clip ts expected to run to!
half as much again, so well did the!
sheep winter. At lust year’s price of
1344c per pound, this would mean well |
w to $126,000 from wool alone, |
the future will easily’ §
THE DOMINION BANK
GIR EDMUND B. OSLER, MP., PRESIDENT.
W. 0. MATTHEWS, VICE-PRESIDENT,
C. A. BOGERT, General Manager. °
This Bank Offers Farmers
a complete and satisfactory banking service.
Sales Notes collected on favorable terms, and advances made
on such notes at reasonable rates,
The Savings Department is a safe and convenient depository
for your money.
one dollar and upwards,
Interest at current rates is paid on deposits of
One dollar opens an account in the Savings Department,
Q
=
e3 CLARESHOLM BRANCH: SYDNEY DAWSON, Manager. zi
p
O
Repairs Promptiy
Attended To
HIGH CLASS HORSE ,
AND STABLE REQUISITES *
at Modernte Prices make the
line of goods furnished by
Kingsley the most economical
to buy and the cheapest in the
long run. Our stock is ex-
ceedingly large, varied and
complete in all detai!s, You
are sure to be thoroughly satis-
fied if you furnish your stable
through us.
J. T. Kingsley
The Harness Man
Claresholm, Alta.
‘D>. B. Vanhorn
LOCAL
ENGLAND'S BLACK MEN.
They Are Remnants of the Ancient
Blue Painted Britons,
Practically every Lustishoan is
Anglo-Saxon by blood, but thete still
are, according to scientists, one or two
corners ju England where there are
eolynies directly descended trom the
vneclient Britons, the blue puinted men
who, according tu the histury books,
Inhabited Cuglavd before the Anglo-
Saxons killed them off
If you came across them you would
at once notice something curious about
tbem. ‘They do not jook like Boglish-
men at all. They are short, us swarthy
us Spaniards, with very narrow heads
and with cnriously cut profiles,
Phere are whole villugefuls of these |
moderp ancient Brituns, though the
villages are very few aud very oat of
the way. It is this out of the wayness
that has kept them so distiuet from |
the country people around them,
Some of these villages buve not even |
* bed road communication with the rest
of the world till comparatively recent
times,
One of these cnrions colonies Is at
Dunsfold, in Surrey, Bedfordstire, too,
bas some
Loudon Tit Bits.
Confusion,
Three ladies us tbey shot in an obser-
vation car Califoruiaward through the
superbest scenery in the world fell to
talking abont dogs.
“1 don't knuw a thing about dogs,”
suld the tirst- lady.
dogs to me.
though, It’s for the cob.”
“Cobs are nice—@
acreed the second lady. "Bot i'm no
dog sharp either Still, | most aay my
choice of a dog would be a mustang,
They're such good watch dogs, urent
they?
“1 don't Rnow one dog from v nother,”
asnid the third indy. “Ll juse divide
them into big dogs and little dogs Um
very fond of a hackney, though—l
mean, of course, for a jap dog." —Chi-
affectiongte,”
| engo Record: Heraid.
villages of “black wen." |
"They're all just |
If | have a preference, |
AGENT
Price $735.00 .
4 Farmers’
Elevator
$2.60
per cwt.
ELEVATOR COQ: t10.:
|S RENAL BRIDGE AXTAs,
No One to Lean On, *
“What's the matter, Tommy?
“Oh, ['m tired of sehool, I'd like to
‘go to bed for n week.”
"Why, bow’s that?”
“Well, you see, ['m In a very awk-
ward position. | was next to the boy
‘at the bottom of the class-and be's
| left.—-Manchester Guardian,
He Forged.
| Trotterp—When soung Riffkins left
college a few years ago, he deciared he
was going to forge his way to the
front. Did he munke goods Homer -
Asn forger- ves, He's now occupying
a front row cell in the peoltentiary.—
Chicago News
Life's Cnanges.
Life Is full of changes. One day we
have an office cat and no catnip, and
the next day we huge plenty of catnip
and no cat.--Toledo Blade,
Wouldet thon snbfert all things to
thyself? Subject thyself to rena ~
Seneca.
eS